Sunday, August 30, 2009

A Niche in a New Habitat

Welcome to the virutal/photographic tour of my room ~ ENJOY!




















full view of the warm abode:




















as we turn to the right, we see the beautiful fridge and more decorations:
















and here are my highly-organized shelves, a mysterious door, and my closet:















artsy reflection shot:




















the most awesome jewelry-organizer ever (thanks, Mama!):




















a few more beautiful sights in/from my room...THANK YOU for visiting!





























Friday, August 28, 2009

The Things We Left Behind...

I just assembled my new digital camera, so I will post pictures of my room and Duke very soon. Don't worry, friends! To give you a sneak peek, this is a photograph that is hung in my room, which has a story (well, actually two) behind it.

The studio where I danced through middle school and highschool had this photograph hanging in the bathroom/changing room. Thus, my first memories of this Harvey Edwards print were intertwined with the rush of changing into black leotards, pink tights, and a colored waistband (which indicated your Level). But it's also reminiscent of the countless hours I spent in the small square-footage of that studio, learning, rehearsing and practicing for the cherished Christmastime classic, the Nutcracker. So when a framed enlargement of this picture materialized in the dance studio at the program where I worked this summer, I was no less than ecstatic. Yes, my enthusiasm may have elicited a confused look from my co-teacher - his brow quizzical for only moments before attributing it to my inherent idiosyncratic ways. Nonetheless, my excitement lasted for hours.

When I found this print at the poster sale outside the Bryant Center (the student center), it reminded me that things are not lost forever, or really ever lost at all. And no, I am not talking about the literal object of the photograph anymore. There are so many things in my life that I have considered "lost" during the past 3 years or so. Now that I am here, I see that there really is a chance to find them again. And I am trying to fearlessly take those chances, those opportunities and run with them before somebody tries to stop me...or more importantly, before I get in my own way.

I have told so many of you how incredibly happy I am here and this pure joy has been hard for me to accurately describe. It stems not from a grandeur of deluxe services here at Duke (though those do exist) or from a posse of sorority sisters (haha...not really!), but being in a place where people love life, hate the Tar Heels, and are really amazing (but still NICE) people. I know it's still unsatisfactory, but that's the best I got. Why don't you just come see for yourselves? I've got a cozy spot on my rug for you...

I'm discovering that I actually can be the person I want to be and I can do the things that I kept telling myself I couldn't. Made it this far, didn't I?

Like last night, for example. I showed up to the audition for a Ballet Repertory class 30 minutes early and while I was busy taping up blisters that had violently ripped open during an African dance class, I overheard the girls next to me: "I think this is on pointe, right?"

Uhhhhhhh, WHAT?? Let's review: Lindsay stopped doing pointe after sophomore year in highschool. She took a weekly beginning pointe class for fun at Jose Mateo's during freshman year in college. But really it's been about FOUR years since she has considered herself "on pointe." Ok, end of review. I briefly considered fleeing the scene, but after that gut response was expressed I decided to stay. I did the audition...and pretty freaking well, all things (including my blisters) considered.

And I got in. Which I am (to reuse a word from earlier in this post) ecstatic about. All this to say, most things are never truly lost. Who I was as at 3, 12, 16 and even 19 can still be a part of me - if I choose that.

Isn't it invaluable to be able to hold onto the best (and sometimes worst) parts of our 3-year-old selves?

(The title of this post if a chapter heading from Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible. I highly recommend reading it.)

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Not Your Mama's Life














As if I weren't impressed already by the sheer beauty of Duke's gothic buildings, the rapidity with which I have fallen in love with this school, and the fact that I got all the classes I wanted...as if all that weren't enough to convince me that I am in the right place, I sat about 50 ft away from Maya Angelou today as she gave a welcome speech to the new Duke students. So now I actually know Duke is the place for me. Maya told me so.

This woman is a phenomenal presence when she speaks. On top of her many other talents, which I neglect to enumerate here only due to lack of space, she has the power to captivate an audience with her humor, grace, and (I must mention it) absolutely no notes. Her address to the Duke Class of 2013 (though more importantly to the select group of Duke transfer students) was not boring in any sense of the word, but full of a straight-forward humor that had the entire chapel laughing. Her manner of delivery was not condescending in the least, though the wisdom she imparted obviously has been gained from a lifetime full of great struggles and successes. She could easily have said, "Well, if you work hard enough, maybe someday you will have 1/8 of my fame and fortune." But alas, she said nothing of the sort. She reminded us, "This is your life...not your mama's, not your papa's, not you boyfriend's or your girlfriend's. It's yours." And that with our lives we have the responsibility to actually do something - starting now. We didn't just come to Duke for that piece of paper to be placed into our hands 4 (or 2) years later...or to find our husband/wife. And then she proceeded to quote Thomas Mann - except when I searched for this quote, the most similar one is from Horace Mann. Oh well...this one is an excellent quotation anyway.

"Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity."

I am so ready to be a part of something bigger - to use what I learned this summer and my passions to make a difference. I have felt unmotivated for so long and I feel recharged. Finally. It's been a long time coming.

I'll wrap this up with a point that Maya (yes, we're on a first-name basis) made at the beginning of her speech: Courage is the most important virtue because without it one cannot consistently practice all of the other virtues. I'm working on having courage. Getting there though.