The title of our blog today, a take on the title of a recent Indonesian film about autism and of a Yugoslav film of the early sixties about misunderstanding ruining relationships, is not a misnomer. It is deliberate.
Oh, yes, it is a social phenomenon that needs exploration which we would partially, and rather superficially, attempt in our blog today. Ours are aspirational times, and ours is a driven, determined and motivated polity. Post/past 1990's, moreover, young Indians are at a crossroad of careers that is more confusing than the Piccadilly Circle, nay, circus, and literally!
Add to this unique offering the sizzling of the "I, me, my" choice and space. As a result is ready on platter this mode(l) of be(com)ing, known as dancing. Just as every second family these days has someone or the other settled abroad, every third household has a dancer, gender being no bar!
Dancing is everywhere. Every lane has a dance school, next often to an Ayurveda center offering the "panchkarma" therapy. No, that is not because the first brings the second patients, as everyone, the young as well as the old, is dancing!
Well, the real reason appears to be that both are 'trending', are 'the' trend(s) these days. Just as every channel has a "Dance pe Chance" kinda of programe for every age group, toddlers to their toothless, dentured yet adventurous grannies n grandpas, every third household these days has a dancer!
Of some variety or the other, ranging from the classical to pop to folk, and their very many versions! In schools, colleges, universities, let there be anything approaching a 'cultural programme', and the entries for dancing, individual, couple, group, would be longer than the famous tail of Lord Hanuman in Ravana's Lanka!
Why, every wedding these days has to have a "sangeet" which has less to do with singing, and everything to deal with dancing, everyone, bride to 'bhataji' (who croons the 'manglashtk' to some famous dance tune), obsessing over, yes, you guessed it right, dance!
Yes, 'come September', and there mushroom any number of dance institutes specialising in 'garba'. That brings us to a moot point. Well, forget the sexualising of tiny bodies on the television, is there indeed any future for so many dancers who punish their own bodies so very mercilessly!?!
Hope every fleet foot lands on very strong n sure terra firma because while learning to dance, to appear accomplished, each hopeful twists in to impossible gyrations, resulting in to everything from spondylitis to weight gain, hormonal imbalance, and so on! Is dancing indeed a strain(ing)?
Pratima@ Can dance be a career? Or does it reduce itself to a time consuming hobby that (re)tires the body and the soul!?! And empties the purses-n-pockets of every doting and hyper-ambitious parent!?!
Quote of the day: "Every savage can dance," says Darcy in Chapter VI of "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen whose two hundred and fiftieth birth anniversary is getting celebrated this year.
Word of the day: pirouette. 'Pirouette' is a fast spin on one leg in the ballet mode of dance. In daily lived life, it refers to a graceful gentle movement.