Go Grammie Go
by Elita Sohmer Clayman
Go Grammie go, gram-me,gram-me were the words from my three
year old number three grandson as I was walking slowly down
the steep steps in his townhome in Northern, Virginia. He
lives there with his dad, my son Jeffrey, his mom Lan and
his baby sister Ava. I was walking quite slowly, one step at
a time. This from our car accident this past June where we
were hit by a man (not a senior, not a teenager) who was
texting. There was quite a lot of damage to the car and to
our bodies. We are still recuperating many months later. We
hope to be dismissed in April 2009 from the various doctors
and hope we get a settlement worth of all our pain and
discomfort. People who do these things to other people
because they were in a hurry to correspond with others via
texting while driving or talking on the phone while driving
need to be punished and one way to do that is to raise their
car insurance because their insurance company had to pay out
fees to the injured people.
The thing I miss the most is my ballroom dancing. We are
hoping to go back to it in a few weeks. Meanwhile, I shall
listen to little three years old Ethan and I will go. He
meant I should walk a little faster. He was trying to go
down the steps behind me and all he saw was his Grammie
doing this at a slow pace.
I thought all the way home about his comment. It was cute
for sure but I figured I could use it for a new column. Many
seniors, not yet seniors or even thirty something’s or forty
something’s may think that dancing is not for them because
it is too demanding.
If they watch Dancing with the Stars, they may be intrigued
about wanting to ballroom dance and they could also feel
intimidated. When they see these stars doing a new dance
completely different from last week’s dance; they can think
that it is too much for them to even attempt. They do not
realize that the stars take many hours of coaching every
week for many days and that is why they are able to conquer
the dance and go out and dance before the public and the
judges.
I want them to realize that their learning would not be in
the same form as these stars. Their attempt to comprehend
the dance will be regulated by their teacher who has
experience in teaching dance. Their teacher will analyze the
capabilities of the student, his or her’s age and his or
her’s ability at this moment in time. Then the teacher will
coach the student at this person’s level of understanding of
dance. It will be just as if he or she is taking a college
course; the learning level will be on that basis.
That is the way it should be with teacher and student. Many
years ago, when I was almost thirty-four years of age, I
decided to go back and to get a college education. The first
professor I had for this course of Psychology 101 wrote in
my essay booklet test that initial time “Mrs.Clayman, you
can and you will do better.” He gave me a B for the whole
course and that was quite satisfactory because I had not
been to school for almost seventeen years. During that time,
I married and had two children and lost my father. So I was
busy running my home, raising my children and helping my Mom
to adjust.
That line in my first test essay booklet inspired me and I
went on to excel there at the school even though I was the
oldest person in the class at a few months before my
thirty-fourth birthday. I was the ‘old lady’ in the class of
all eighteen year olds. I showed those kids that an ‘old’
lady can absorb and can learn and did learn. I graduated
with honors five years later because it took me five years
to do two years of college work going part time and racing
home to be there when my children arrived home from school.
I read a slogan once that said that something was a ‘price
above rubies.’ I interpreted that to mean that some things
are so worthwhile that the end result is that they are worth
more than a precious stone called a ruby.
So it is with learning, whether it is college learning or
dancing learning or any learning, the end result will be a
price worth more than rubies. Ballroom dancing is almost a
necessary tool to enjoy life. Men sometimes think it not
valuable or beneficial other than to impress a lady when out
on a date. Once they get indoctrinated with the routine,
they find it hard to admit they really ‘love’ it. My husband
was that way for many, many years. He would never admit that
he liked it or enjoyed it because he found it hard. The
amazing thing was that he was excellent at it. He had the
best lead of any man I danced with other than the
professional teachers. He held himself upright and
understood the lead and the makeup of each step. As he
progressed, he found it hard to admit to himself or me that
he really enjoyed. dancing. He would go grudgingly to the
social dances on Saturday night or Sunday afternoon and
would say to the owner of the studio upon entering that he
wanted to go home. She laughed because she knew he really
did not feel that way. Several times, I heard him tell his
male friends that he really was good at it and they seemed
envious.
Once when I danced at a competition in Kansas City, Missouri
he was supposed to dance with me as an amateur couple. When
we got there and looked at the program, they only had a few
couples dancing and they inserted us in a group of young
twenty something’s dancing that heat. We were in our forties
then and these ‘kids’ were in their early twenties. He
decided he would not do it because of the age difference and
we never showed up that morning to compete. Interesting
thing was that two of the twenty something’s did not show up
either and if we had danced, we would have won a trophy
because we were more skilled and prepared than the rest of
the competitors in that heat.
The owner of the competition Leroy Walters and his mom Gerry
Walters laughed and when we were leaving to go home, they
offered him a trophy because we had come such a distance to
dance in their competition. He did not take it because he
felt he did not deserve it since he had not entered the
heat. When we got home, he took one of my trophies won there
with my professional teacher and showed it to the people at
our pharmacy and said he had won it. That was alright
because he had gone there and he let me dance and have fun
and I felt he deserved to show off and they did not know the
difference.
However, what that meant was that he really loved dancing
and he wanted to brag about himself to others that did not
dance and he felt he wanted their admiration because he had
in his own mind attempted to do it and got scared because of
the age disparity. Many of us are threatened by others who
appear to be dancing better than us. It is hard to eliminate
that feeling, but as we progress with our lessons and our
practicing at social dances; then we feel more confident.
As the professor said to me that first test, you can and you
will do better. I have made that my catchword in most
everything I attempt in life. Whatever I try whether it is
to go to Weight Watchers to lose some weight or to take a
course in something or other at a school or learning a new
dance step; I remember that I can and I will do better.
The can part of that phrase is
the beginning meaning telling us we are able to start. The I
will do better is the middle and end result of the doing.
Once we set our minds that we can attempt something new, and
then our brain will take on the rest. Ballroom dancing is
one of the most excellent hobbies we can start to enhance
our brain power.
To someone looking at us dancing, they may not realize what
important part the mind plays in ballroom dancing. They
think it about the feet and maybe the arms. They are not
cognizant of the fact of what an achievement this adventure
is and as Katherine Anne Porter said “it is something you
seek for pleasure and that you will to occur.”
This will to occur is the outcome of this adventure to learn
to achieve and be proud of yourself that you did this at any
age. You can be in your early twenties, thirties or even
forties like I was to start. You may be in your sixties or
seventies or older and still this is an accomplishment.
When I was down in Miami Beach, Florida many years ago,
there was a blind lady who danced in several heats in a
competition. Can you believe that no one knew she was blind
and when she won her awards, it was announced that she was
blind and everyone had tears in their sighted eyes at this
amazing senior lady who conquered not only terrible
affliction of this cross to bear; she won awards. The judges
did not know of this and chose her because of her talent and
presentation. At this competition there also was a young
woman named Jill who had one leg shorter than the other. She
had a special dance shoe made for her with it raised up and
it was quite noticeable but she came out and danced like
everything was normal. She did difficult steps, wore a
gorgeous outfit and she smiled like she was a professional
lady dancing with her student when she was the student. It
took chutzpah (nerve) to go out there with this terrible
handicap and especially to dance with it where it was so
visible.
Many years later, we went back to this competition and there
Jill was again. This time we found out that she had
discovered the courage within herself to find an orthopedic
doctor who said he could lengthen her to some extent and so
some of the shortness was gone and she did not have to wear
the dance shoe with such a built up part on it. She still
was not perfect with her leg but she was about eighty
percent better. She told me she had the feeling she could
help herself and so she went through the operation. Ernest
Hemingway called something like this as ‘grace under
pressure.” Jill surely got her grace from the ballroom
dancing and the professional teacher who encouraged her to
dance even though her foot was so out of line, many inches
shorter than the other one.
In between the operation or operations she showed herself
that she could do what many thought she could not even try
.She decided she wanted to dance and she did not let her
handicap deter her. She was poetry in motion and she proved
herself to be the poet who wrote to herself a mental note
that she could and would bring to fruition her desire.
So to the Jills of this world and to the blind senior lady
and to us, we must remember that we can and we will do
better and that we can have grace under pressure and have
pride in our self that we, no matter who we are at any age,
at any handicap, and at any time in our life can accomplish.
We are going to transcend every expectation that we desire.
Go Grammie go means every one us should go. Go and dance and
be happy doing it because we seek this pleasure and are
grateful we are out there with this accomplishment known as
ballroom dancing. William Hazlitt said “grace is the outward
expression of the inward harmony of the soul.” That is what
ballroom dancing means- harmony of the soul. I cannot wait
to go back to my dancing. Then I will have the blending of
my heart and soul because once more I will be a ballroom
dancer.
Always keep on dancing.
You can email me at elitajerrydancing@verizon.net
April 2009