
The ball of the foot hurts a little, feels burnt actually. But thereās a blood rush in that toe-tapping, sole-thumping and heel-thudding, a sense of achievement in a beginnerās Kathak class. My fellow students, all between six and pre-teens, are all raring to claim everything the world has to offer. Best foot forward. But I am 51, battered by circumstance, too beaten to claim something new. Yet, here
I am, standing tall in my awkwardness. Unmindful of fears, expectations, judgments, age-appropriateness and all kinds of gaze.
Growing up, I had always loved dancing. As I did painting, writing and drama. And if you have spent your wonder years in Kolkata, you would know that Bengali parents pursue their holistic education ideals with a missionary zeal. Good, because I got exposed to art and culture early on. Bad, because dancing got left behind for sound career choices. After all, journalism had a greater potential to change the world.
Those days, our choices were idealistic than being either oriented or driven. And adulting during the post-liberalisation years meant that the world had opened up and had to be gulped down ravenously. Then there was the sun-kissed warmth of a family life. Suffice to say,
I gave up on dance. Mid-life and mid-career, when life still seems to be a work in progress, having ducked a curve ball or two, Iāve realised that mine needed to be leavened by a dollop of passion. Many suggested story-telling, painting, pottery, all supposedly in the realm of suitability. What if dance happens to be my new-found moment of self-expression? Fulfilment?
You would think such existential questions should ideally be asked at a restless 25 than at a sedate 50. But then I got my answers from two people I had met early on in my career. Narayan was the subject of an interview and choreographer Bhavini Mishra an intern in my team. Narayan made it easier for me to understand Kathak beyond its raw physical energy and feel its sensuality, subtlety and nuances.
When I met Bhavini, she was finishing her mass communication course and getting her rhythms right, be it for Chhau, jazz, contemporary⦠Sharp and focused, she would have made it as a journalist but chose dance. And just when she was making her mark, a fall on stage meant that could never perform again. But she proved doctors wrong, soaring with abandon as she conceived her most difficult acts since. She believes that each one of us can create our own dance forms and get our bodies to speak our minds.
Why is it that I believe them now and didnāt go with my impulses before? Because Iāve been trapped by biases of my own making. I am professedly liberal but not liberated enough. People look at you one time, then the moment passes on. And we let that one moment ruin our free spirit. Weāve got to tell ourselves, weāll still be okay. But happier.
National Editor Shalini Langer curates the āShe Saidā column