Sometimes, as a grown up person, I feel this incredibly
strong urge just to walk away from something that I love, something I’ve put
years of my time and megatons of my energy into. It isn’t the occasional
reversal that makes me want to quit, or even a big conflict or blow up (rare as
these are); rather, it’s when I feel as if whatever it is I am doing matters
only to me. I want the things I do to have a little more reach than that, I
guess. Usually, for practical reasons, I don’t get to quit whatever it is when
I want to. I guess that’s a good thing, but sometimes quitting, despite its
negative connotations, can produce very positive life change. I think quitting
might be an undervalued impulse in our lives.
I quit ballet when I was a teenager, and it was a huge
thing. I had spent the last two or three years, at least, going every day after
school, and on Saturdays. For years before that, I had gone less often, but
still, a lot, and this had been going on since I was six; one year, when they
were restructuring the primary program at Cornish, my mother drove me out to
Bellevue several afternoons a week to study with a teacher there. And she was
not a stay-at-home mom – she worked 3/4 time for the school district. In
addition to their time, my parents had spent unthinkable sums they could ill
afford on my tuition, my shoes, my uniforms and everything else. I had mostly
been friends with one or two other girls who were also ballet kids. So, it was
a major, life-altering decision to quit. Looking back, though I remember the
details only hazily, I think it was the first really adult decision I had to
make.
I had been having knee trouble, and ankle trouble, and the
orthopedist who saw me was concerned that I had gone on pointe too early and
damaged some of the bones in my feet. This was pretty serious, but he thought
that six months of physical therapy would put it right, and there was no real
imperative that I quit entirely. So why did I?
It had been building for a long time, I suppose. The year
before our class had taken our first RAD exams (the levels had different names then, but I suppose this was the equivalent of today's intermediate foundation vocational grade), and I had passed, but not with any kind of distinction. I
was very discouraged about that, and then when I did not get into the Junior
Company but was instead chosen to dance a character role (Marya, the Snow Maiden's "mother") for The Snow Maiden, I was even more
downcast. Then my best (and basically only) friend at Cornish suddenly quit,
and my friend at PNB convinced me to audition for their school. I was accepted,
but not into the level I was in at Cornish.
Recounting this, I think – wow, I did pretty well… I got a
pass, and not just a provisional pass, on an RAD exam, had a role that while
not very glamorous involved a ton of
acting, partner work, and lots of time on stage, and was accepted into the professional
school of a major ballet company. I was fifteen, for heaven’s sake!
At the time, however, these all felt like massive failures to me. I was
miserable. I thought that Mrs. Barker hated me, and that every other girl in my
class was better than I was.
My parents and I talked it over. I’m sure they were somewhat
relieved, honestly. They were hoping I would go to college and so forth and
ballet, at least the way I was going about it, is a brutal career that nobody
would really wish on their daughter. My dad, however, had always been quite
firm on one point: if you quit something, it is your job to explain to the
people whom you are letting down why you are doing it. I did not really think
Mrs. Barker would be very let down by my quitting. But still, it was really
awful to go into her office that day and tell her I would not be coming back. I
was so sad about it, on the one hand, and so sure that it was the right choice,
on the other. Some tears were shed, and not by Mrs. B.
Thirty years later, or thereabouts, do I still feel so sure?
Pretty much. I loved to dance, and I was reasonably good at it, and if I had
been at a different kind of dance school, and had I been a different, more
imaginative kind of kid, maybe I would have found a path that continued to include
ballet through the rest of high school and college. Maybe I would, like one of
my classmates in college, have gone on to be a dance teacher, or to dance
professionally in New York, or work as a choreographer, who knows? Instead, I
discovered other things and they led me to where I am now… feeling a bit like
quitting, but reminded, simply by the act of remembering the time I did quit
the thing I cared about most, that failures and frustrations can look very
different in the moment than they will at a distance. Holding on to one’s
belief that one will get to that distant place and be able to look back and
say, “Hey, that wasn’t so bad, actually,” that’s the trick.
I am glad in a way that I quit ballet when I did.
It took me years to get it out of my head that quitting the
professional-preparation track I had been on meant I could not dance. In
my early twenties, I took it back up for a year or two, along with modern, and
it was tempting to think I could just maybe get my form back and do something
with it, but I was starting my MA program and that soon drew my attention away.
Picking it up again at forty seemed a little kooky, but I don’t think that if I
had danced right through my teens and twenties I would be able to enjoy it as
simply and as purely as I do now; there would still be the burden (self
imposed) of the career expectation and the constant worry about comparing
myself to others and competing for the attention of teachers.
Plus, my feet would be wrecked.
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Friday, August 16, 2013
On Quitting
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