A Memory

My paternal grandmother — the last surviving grandparent — was recently hospitalized and my dad doesn’t think her chances are good. I’m not sure I can confidently say that I’ll miss her. This is not because we’ve had a particular bad relationship, nor because of my presumptive cold indifference to life. Rather, it’s that I’ve only ever seen her twice in the short span of time where our lives overlap: once when I was around 4 years old when she visited us in the US, and once last year when my sister and I visited her and our uncle’s family in Bridgend.

Of the first visit, I don’t remember much. Maybe she stayed for 2 weeks, maybe 2 months. I remember that she was a lot younger, but then again, back then she was probably as old as my dad is now. I remember her bringing little gifts: a 5-pound banknote, a toy red double-decker bus. What else, I don’t remember; and where those are now, I don’t know.

It’s funny how our memories can freeze time, how even though we know that time passes for all of us at (roughly) the same rate, we choose to believe otherwise. How certain frames become suspended in our minds, and then, when years later we revisit that person or place, we are shocked at how things have changed.

Since emigrating to the US in the 1970s, my parents never really went back to Taiwan. I went once with my dad when I was around 5 years old, but I don’t believe my mom ever went back. I’m not sure whether it was the of lack of sentimentality or the fact that basically no relatives from either side of the family remained there that prompted their non-desire; when I asked them, their response was akin to “there’s no need to, this is our home now.” So when we took a family trip back to Taiwan in 2008 (has it been that long already?), mostly at my and my sister’s insistence, it was maybe more an eye opener for them than it was for us.

… How my mom was surprised that none of the trains ran on coal anymore, the way they were when she took them to school and back… yet those bento-style meals on the train were still tasty, reminded her of those days…

… The place where my mom grew up, the old buildings long gone. A flat piece of unused land. Ten-story apartment buildings all around. What used to be a stream is now a road. How we all met one of her old family friends just walking down the road. Chatting in his flat over tea, admittedly a bit awkward for us children. Hearing reminiscences of stories before our time, a life we rarely heard about, rarely received much exposition when we asked…

… The place where my dad grew up, a square plot of land frozen in time. High-rise buildings surround it, but the two housing structures built by his father still there, fenced off (we didn’t have the key), weathering away, a place from a different time. How many thousands of people must walk by it, and what do they think of it? The little “courtyard” where they raised chickens, dust upon dirt. Maybe that well used to work. Some soda cans and fast food wrappers seemingly incongruous to that odd historical monument. The doors missing planks, the walls cracked. Oddly, no graffiti. The family shrine to my grandfather: his picture, some of his calligraphy still hanging on the wall. I wonder which aunt or uncle chose to keep the home intact and undeveloped. I hope it’s still there now.

A trip to the UK, with a stop in Bridgend, Wales, where my grandmother lives with my uncle and his family. He runs what must be the only Chinese restaurant in town (maybe in all of Wales). Their lives are maybe not as comfortable as ours; running a family restaurant means they don’t get any days off. They work lunch and dinner hours, so the day we visit we didn’t see my uncle or his wife much. Grandma stays at home, still ambulatory with a walking cane. Walking around the house exacts a toll on her, but she doesn’t want any help. How old is she? 85? 90? She probably has more energy than my sister and me, who were struck by some strong spell of sleepiness that entire trip (to this day I still don’t know if we were sick or if it was just the weather). The only common language was Mandarin, neither our nor her primary language. It’s tough communicating. All those nouns I’ve long since forgotten make each sentence too deliberate, too cumbersome to carry a conversation. Did she enjoy living in the UK? Not really. But my uncle takes care of her; she’s there for the family. I don’t know what to do, how I can help out. We all nap.

Even if we’re not that close, we’re still family. I saw that pride and stoicism in her, traits forged in a different culture, a different lifetime — of what use now? She’s suffered plenty enough. Time flows ever on. I cry a little, because what else can I do?

Resolutions 2015

Despite it not having been a particularly bad year for me, my resolutions for 2014 were nominally a resounding disaster:

  • Tell my family I love them: Nope.
  • Write more: Nope.
  • Shoulder sit or quit: Nope, unless you count the black lamb in Nutcracker (which I don’t).
  • Keep chasing unicorns: Nope. Nope.

As with many of the years before, 2014 proved to be one of frustratingly slow but tangible progress. I think I’ve begun to make an uneasy peace with some very large issues with the universe, which is about as much as I could ask for. The board position looks a little better, and I’m seeing glimpses of the endgame.

After the requisite amount of ruminating, I couldn’t really think of any major resolutions of the new year. Thinking a little more, the biggest thing that I want to change in the upcoming year is to start reversing course on my coldness and distance. I’ve noticed that I’ve become more withdrawn and not present, and hopefully I can start the process of being a little friendlier and in the moment. On second thought, that is quite a major resolution.

I have a feeling that 2015 will be a momentous and memorable year.

SJDT Nutcracker 2014

It’s been almost 2 weeks since the SJDT performances, and the euphoria and the crash have both subsided. It was so hard to go back to work after that week, I felt like it was stepping into a different life. Maybe that’s part of the magic and the charm that keeps me coming back.

Had I known ahead of time that we’d have rehearsals every Saturday and Sunday for almost 3 months, I’m not sure I would have had the heart to sign up. It was grueling at times not having a day off from work or rehearsals, especially since work this time of year tends to be busy, but I think the attention put into the production really helped. Putting together a whole new production with new choreography was a big undertaking, and I’m just so impressed that the SJDT community pulled it off. Given the tough circumstances, a lot of us had more roles than we might have deserved (or wanted!), and being cast in all the shows was certainly rough during the performances. But the board and the others working behind the scenes also poured their hearts into getting everything working and getting the seats filled, and I think that’s equally impressive and deserving of respect. Even if I didn’t personally dance all that well, it’s hard to say the shows weren’t ultimately a success for the company and for the school. I think Linda’s tenure as artistic director is off to a good start.

My body’s almost healed up from the abuse of theatre week and performing, not to mention the cold that plagued me and a number of others throughout that week. I managed to pull a hip muscle in one of the Saturday shows, and it’s slowly getting better, but I have a feeling it will be one of those persistent injuries. Somehow, my right ankle survived with just a little tenderness.

I normally don’t get nervous for shows because I really have nothing to lose, but that first time stepping on the SJCPA was rather intimidating. The stage is so much larger than the others I’ve been on, and it has an air of seriousness that surpasses those of a smaller theatre such as MVCPA. Of the four “real” shows, I think two went well for me and two didn’t go so well. I still cringe a little remembering how I completely missed an entrance on the Friday night show, after making the same mistake in the Thursday runthrough. I could chalk it up to being sick and exhausted from the week, or that it’s kind of weird to have that short appearance of Russian in Waltz of the Flowers, but it was definitely an embarrassing lapse. Good thing it wasn’t critical to the ballet; still, stupid me. Live performances are never perfect, but sometimes I wish there were a reset button.

It wasn’t an easy decision to do a different studio’s Nutcracker this year, and it was sad to bail on my old ballet family and not able to see the WB show. I really wish I could have seen some of the girls in the roles they got this year, but alas, the shows were all on the same weekend. In the end, though, I think it was worth it: some old friends, many new friends, and another learning experience. I tell myself that I’ll stop ballet when I stop improving or learning, and this was a great opportunity that reinvigorated me at a time when I was close to quitting (although maybe I say this every year as well). Being able to work with new choreography was also great, and now I can say that I’ve had a soloist role made for me. I hope I’ve improved my partnering a little bit, and am grateful to have had the opportunity to have the roles I got, especially Marzipan. It’s been a magical ride.