The Research Process: Uncovering
one’s own Assumptions
Having taken quite a while to Blog on this theme since the
months’ skype discussion, I feel I could now add many more loose ideas and
impressions. One that I seem to be
coming back to is the extent to which ours assumptions are compounded by
language, when we resort to clichés and tropes, when we rely on short hand
terms to express our ideas and feelings without being really explicit or clear
through our language about what we mean.
What does it mean when we say someone is not dancing on/with/to
the music? Is this short hand for saying
someone is not dancing on the beat of the music? What about saying someone is dancing
musically? Would music have to be
present within the environment for someone to be seen to be dancing musically
or could they be dancing musically in ‘silence’? Is ‘musicality’ simply a way of listening and
interpreting music through the moving body?
I don’t know....
From a slightly different perspective I was brought up on
the correction ‘pull-up’ through all the countless ballet teachers I
experienced, but never really understood what I should be feeling or aiming
towards. It took me a long time to recognise
the extreme tension and inability to breath that that remark inspired in me,
and a much longer time to understand that to feel balanced and ‘centred’
required the co-ordination of many elements one very helpful for me being
giving the weight to the floor, pushing down to spiral upwards. Each person seems to respond to and is
inspired by different ways of relating to the body.
When I teach I feel acutely aware of the importance of the
language I use. Sometimes this
sensitivity feels like a stumbling block.
It is something I am working on.