Author Archives: asher

Ballet Squid Chronicles: Back In My Element

I took Claire’s class this afternoon, and I’m starting to feel like I’ve got my legs under me again.  Which is good, because at the beginning of class, I wasn’t so sure.   For some reason, I kept dégage-ing when I was supposed to tendu and vice-versa.   D’oh.

Claire also gave me some hands-on mid-torso corrections, getting the pelvis tucked back under while bringing the sternum forward.  I was once again over-correcting for my tendency to hollow my lower back, throwing my shoulders back and compensating in the mid-torso.  The core work this month has made it a little easier to keep my torso pulled together when I remember to do it.  Now I just need to remember.

The hard part is knowing that what feels like a straight torso isn’t, in the same way that I had to re-train my proprioception with regard to my wrists and arms.   (This is an interesting side-effect of that benign joint hypermobility thing; it makes your arabesque awesome, but your proprioception kind of wonky.)

Anyway, in today’s class I realized that if I rein in the size of my movements, I can get prettier technique out of myself.  I guess I should know that by now.

Also, I need to get back to having confidence in myself as a dancer and
not thinking so much.  I kept reminding myself to just dance, that the combinations would come, and when I did that successfully, things came off rather nicely.

In other news, I found a Pilates class I can probably work into my schedule, so I’m hoping to give that a try some time soon.  I don’t want to add too much to the rotation until I’m really on top of things, though.

So that’s it for now.   More to come.

Cue Rocky Theme

I’m cautiously optimistic that I’m recovering from this week’s episode of depressolepsy.

I got to sleep without any trouble last night (regardless of the caffeine).   I woke up once at around 01:30 to stumble, zombie-like, to the head, and then to stumble onwards into the kitchen, where I ate one quarter of a baguette because I was starving.

This morning I’m up and about and feeling mostly human: predictably, my ankles are stiff (they always are after I take a break from ballet and then return to class),  but otherwise I’m making it.

I am debating whether I’m ready to jump back into intermediate class tomorrow morning.   It might behoove me to do Saturday’s beginner class instead for a couple of weeks in order to get back on form, even though that will mean following a W/S/S schedule for a bit, which seems a little weird.

In other news, I broke off the Karakoram’s wing mirror yesterday, so I snagged a replacement from Bardstown Road Bicycle Company.  It’s a “Mountain Mirrycle,” and it is hands-down the single best bike mirror I’ve ever had.

So that’s it for now.   Today is for homework, chores, and going on a date with my husband (woot!).

Ballet Squid Chronicles: Weaksauce

So I did class tonight, and I kind of sucked.

That is, I had all kinds of flexibility — full split both ways (like, “Boom!   I’m on the floor!  Whaaaaat?”) ; insane cambre action (I’m all, “I can see me arse from here!”  Okay, not quite, but close enough) — and my core was pretty solid, but everything else was a mess.

I’m all, “Turnout?  Wot?” “Oh, weight transfer, not: wait, transfer…”

And Tawnee is all, “I DID NOT JUST SEE YOU SICKLE THAT FOOT, BOY.”

You know, except she’s a nice ballet teacher, so it wasn’t that harsh.

Well, I should say that everything was terrible except my allegro, both petit et grand.  My glissade be all snapsnap.

Also, I sound like an idiot because I’m really tired.

Anyway, I felt generally pudgy and schlubby and out of shape, but at least I felt like a pudgy, schlubby, out of shape dancer.  So there’s that.

I’ve had enough time off.  Back to Being A Dancer.

That’s it for now.

G’night, everybody.

PS : The Unitard Hides NOTHING. …Nothing, y’all.

Quickie: I’m Feeling Much Better

Yesterday’s plan of rest and conscientious caffeine use seems to have helped.  I’m on the uptick today.   Cautiously optimistic.

In other news, my SI group was awesome this morning:

image

Then There Are Days Like Today

It’s 10 AM, and although I’ve been awake for a while, I’m still in bed, reading.

There are things I need to do: dishes to wash, bills to pay, homework.  But I am still in bed, still reading, still trying to pull myself together. 

I cannot explain the sensation that follows the thought, “I need to get up and write some checks.”  It is difficult to admit that, at moments like this one, small anxieties are crushing.  When I’m on the upswing, of course, anxiety does not exist.

~

I brought this on myself.

For whatever reason, alcohol seriously destabilizes my mood.  It brings on precipitous depressions, even when I’m trending towards the hypomanic side of up.  It knocks me out of my tree.

This isn’t to say that I can’t have a beer or a cocktail or a glass of wine.   I can usually handle that.   It’s anything more that’s too much: I don’t get hangovers, but the chemistry of my brain just jumps the track.  It can take a good, long time to get it back on target.

~

On Saturday, after the opera, we had dinner at a new local place that has fantastic subs, amazing pizza, and an extensive beer selection.   Kelly and I shared a pitcher of pilsner that was bought for us by some folks with whom we traded tables so they could all sit together as a group.

I had a couple of pints, maybe three.   Way more than I normally drink (when I drink at all).  It was perfect with the pizza, crisp and delicious, and yet even as I forged bravely towards the bottom of my glass, part of me realized that I was Making A Big Mistake.

Sunday, I woke up feeling hollow, as if all that was good had been sucked out of creation, leaving only the “meh” of survival.  

Monday, I fought my way through a morass, trying to keep a brave face on it. 

Last night, having finished my class notes from Saturday, I admitted to Denis that I was not well.

Today …  well, here I am.

~

It’s easy to understand how drinking can snowball for someone like me.  

If I had less insight – if I hadn’t grown up with a father who was a recovering alcoholic; if I hadn’t received the powerful prophylaxis that comes with being hospitalized for the first time at age fourteen and then spending three years in intensive in- and outpatient treatment; if I hadn’t been given a lot of very conscious education about all this – I would probably think, “Well, I felt pretty good when I was quaffing that pils, and I feel like crap now.   I know!   I’ll have more beer!  That’ll help!”

It turns out that I’m not the only person with bipolar for whom alcohol is like an “Activate Depression Mode” switch. 

I guess it makes sense: antidepressants and stimulants can kick off mania; alcohol is a depressant.   Of course it can kick off a depression.  The whole point of bipolar disorder is that the brain’s ability to regulate its own chemistry is, to a greater or lesser degree, broken.

This, however, is a hard lesson to actualize.

It’s easy enough to know rationally: “My brain has trouble regulating its own chemistry, so my moods get out of whack.”

It’s harder to grok the applications: “My brain has trouble regulating its own chemistry, so alcohol can make me really depressed for a while.   Caffeine can make me manic.”

It’s hard to accept those realities and to keep a super-tight check rein on myself all the time (to be fair, I do schedule times in my life when I can take the check rein off; now is not one of them).  Those of us with bipolar disorder often crave stimulation and spontaneity, even when it’s the worst possible idea.

~

I’m not sure how to approach today.   I think I’m going to budget a little caffeine in hopes of nudging the meter back towards the positive.  

I guess I’ll also have to get back on the fish oil, which I’ve been neglecting to take (for no rational reason … yet another malfunction I can’t even explain to myself).

Tomorrow, I’ll have work, school, therapy, and ballet.

With a little luck, maybe all of those things will crack this depression and I’ll be able to tend back towards the midline instead of languishing for weeks because I made one poor decision.

~

In the end, this is part of the difficulty in dealing with bipolar disorder.

What might be no big deal for someone with typical neurochemistry is a potential game-changer for us.  

It is not hyperbole to say that 1.5 extra pints of lager can become a question of life or death: the little blip is there in the back of my head that says, “It would be so much easier just to die.” 

If I was in the position of too many of my sisters and brothers who wrestle with bipolar — if I didn’t have a privileged background that afforded early treatment that taught me important coping skills; if I didn’t have a spouse who loves and supports me even in my darkest hours; if I had to worry about a stressful job and whether or not the bills would be paid and I’d be able to eat, let alone keep a roof over my head; if I didn’t have a gifted, effective therapist…

Without all the things that I did nothing to earn that help keep me afloat, it would be statistically pretty likely that my weekend’s minor excess could snowball into suicide.

That’s the reality for too many of us.  Other people drink a little too much and get hangovers; we drink a very, very little too much and get tragedy.

For those of us with bipolar disorder, the repercussions of some decisions are amplified beyond all reason.

And we, who are not always so great at staying rational in the first place, must somehow cope with these repercussions.

~

I’m not sure where I’m going with all this.   It began as a kind of confession: Okay, yes, I’m struggling a little and I’m hiding it as usual.

It’s grown into some weird sociopolitical treatise: here is a reality that people with bipolar know that maybe “typical” people don’t see.   Here is why your bestie really means it when she says, no, she can’t have a second drink. 

Here is why maybe he does anyway and then drops off the planet for two weeks afterwards: because sometimes, when it’s been a while, we forget just how fast and hard that extra drink can drop us through the bedrock, or how explosively that extra cappuccino can launch us into the sun.

Ballet Squid Chronicles: Saturday Class Notes A La Monday

On Friday night, I went out with the of my bike peeps on what the bike world calls an s24o (edit: that’s short for “sub-24 hour overnight”).

We loaded up or bikes with camping stuff, met up at Great Food Brewing Company at Dundee Loop, then rode across town (back towards my house!) and out to Jefferson Memorial Forest.   There, we made camp and enjoyed beer, camaraderie, and various rehydrated foods (I had a spicy shrimp Bowl Noodle!).

Eventually, we tottered off to our several temporary beds, wherein we shivered for various amounts of time and got more or less sleep.   I actually warmed up fairly fast and slept pretty well,  thanks in part to my Klymit Static inflatable pad, which is super-comfy and harder to roll off of than most.   I didn’t sleep long enough, though.

On Saturday morning, we all made hot drinks (mostly coffee; I did tea), packed up, and rolled back out. I peeled off early to get home in time for ballet class.

Denis and I had an opera in the plans, so we just did Essentials.  Since we’ve just started a new ballet year, class was very basic — which meant it was a great opportunity to really focus on technique.

We were also in Studio 4, which has a wood floor (more slippery than Marley!) and one very tall portable barre (my most favoritest barre ever).

Barre was simple, which was good, because I was bushwhacked from riding bikes and not sleeping very much.   There was definitely a point at which I got the “You can point better than that” tap on my toe and discovered that, in fact, I kind of couldn’t.   The flesh was willing…ish, but the mind was cooked.  My brain just couldn’t even (I should note that I was pointing those toes …  just, you know, not quite as much as usual) .

I did find that, even though I was tired, my core was much steadier during grand battement than it was before I started doing the Plank Challenge.  My extensions during grand battement were also higher, even though I only had a full split on the left on Saturday.

I guess my core strength is improving!

Going across the floor, we just worked on chassé avant.  Margie provided us with a helpful mental image: when your feet meet mid-chassé, you should basically be in a mid-air sous-sous (like you would during soubresaut).

For some reason, I’d never really thought of that before, but it does two cool things!

First, it makes your chassé prettier.

Second, it adds to your momentum, so you travel farther on each chassé.  (Sadly, Studio 4 is tiny, so traveling farther wasn’t necessarily a great idea!)

We also worked on very basic port des bras, so I focused on making mine prettier (that is, neither squidly nor hieroglyphic).

So that’s it for now.  Moar class on Wednesday!

Huh. Turns Out I Like My Life.

Just now – sitting on the bus home from shopping for a few last-minute Winter Bike Camping things (like fake stroopwafels, you guys, OMG!) and reading G+ posts, I found myself thinking, “I like my life.”

This is a profound advance from, like, say, for years ago, when I hated basically my whole life except Denis and bikes and cats.

Now I have a bunch of crazy friends with whom I can ride bikes up a big ol’ Hill and then camp out in the freezing cold — the kind of friends who are willing to shuffle the agenda around so now of us can enjoy breakfast together tomorrow morning.

Now I have ballet (and all the ballet accessories, and a whole slew of Ballet Peeps).

Now I have people all over the world on the Plus who may (Or may not!  Some are right here!) be far away, but who nonetheless comprise a warm, caring, active, snarky, hilarious, serious real community.  We don’t all agree about everything, but we do all focus on what we’ve got in common.   We don’t even usually come to fisticuffs in the Great Debate over Friction vs Indexed.  Usually.

I’m almost done with my Bachelor’s.   I no longer work at a job I hate.   I’m working at a brand-new job and I’m excited about it!

And, of course, I still have Denis and cats.

Sometimes things are still hard.   Bipolar makes life difficult once in a while.

But that’s okay.   Things are mostly good now.  I am lucky, and surprisingly, I really kind of like my life.

Go figure.

Ballet Squid Chronicles: In Which Your Humble Blogger Hoses Up His Ballet Schedule By Getting A Job

I am now officially a Supplemental Instruction Leader.

For those not familiar with the concept, SI is sort of like a formalized study group for a specific class led by a peer who has done well in the class in question.  The SI Leader is there to facilitate, organize the process, and keep stuff rolling along.

Being an SI Leader is a great opportunity for people who are interested in teaching (not least because it provides a chance to see if you’re actually at all suited to teaching), not to mention a fantastic way to review challenging material from a class you’ve already taken.  That’s a big win-win for me.

The only drawback?

Scheduling.  (What else?)

Predictably, the class for which I’ll be leading the SI session A) is early and B) overlaps with M/W morning ballet.

This means I’ll be taking on some wacky alternative ballet schedule this semester (I’m thinking W, F, S, S) in exchange for the chance to enjoy the heck out of revisiting Behavioral Neuroscience and help some other students out along the way.

It also means getting up at 5:45 or 6:00 in order to be at school to lead an 8:30 AM group.  In the long run, this is a good thing, as it forces me to get up earlier than I otherwise might.

It also means that, in order to catch to 7:15 bus to school, I’ll be out on the bike on relatively low-traffic roads (today, I opted to take the bus the whole way for Reasons).

In other news, I’m still planking along, but have given up on trying to make movies because we’re doing dynamic planks right now and it’s seriously hard to talk and do those (and 2+ minutes of me planking while staring at the camera just sounds boooooooring). 

I did make it 2 minutes and 11 seconds yesterday, though!

So that’s it for now.  I’ll be posting my original Behavioral Neuroscience SI resources here for anyone who either leads “undergrad brain-class” SI or just likes brains and might enjoy them. 

First two should be up soon!

Planks for the Memories*

*Am I going to regret firing that one off so early in this project?

A quick recap of the weekend’s planks:
Saturday: 67 seconds and change
Sunday: 82 seconds

Today, I went for 90, with help from my cat.

You guys, I have definitely done a better job explaining things on many occasions.

Edit: I just realized I have also been doing that thing that drives me crazy, wherein someone creates content I would find interesting, but makes it available in video format only, whereupon I encounter it in a train tunnel or somewhere equally unfriendly to streaming media.

Oh well.

No Video Today, 67 Seconds of Plank

I’m not doing a video today because Denis is having a movie marathon in the living room, and the living room is the only plank-friendly spot in the house right now. The family room (in the basement) is, at present, full of the chairs that normally live in the dining room, the guest room is full of year-end finance stuff, and … yeah, I’m just gonna stop there.

This much I will say: I was pretty surprised how easy I found it to do the whole video-blogging thing. I say this not because I’m in any way camera-shy (I’m not; I’m our typical pretty-boy shutterbug in that regard, and my phone is arguably as clogged with ridiculous selfies as any 14-year-old’s) — it’s just that the spoken word isn’t necessarily my preferred medium.

Put concisely, writing gives me time to find all the words and stuff and arrange them in some fashion that more or less effectively resembles the ideas I’m trying to communicate.

I figured I’d have a bit harder a time doing that out loud, but it turns out that if I think about what I want to say for a bit before I say it, it kind of comes out okay (maybe that’s something I should remember for daily life :/).

That’s it for now. I’m on a bit of an uptick, which may or may not be a good thing. I’m not sure that I can tell the difference between feeling “normal” (for whatever that means) and the onset of mania. Then again, for me, I’m not entirely sure there is a difference. I’m doing my best to monitor and keep a lid on it. On the other hand, for the moment, it’s definitely better than being depressed.

Okay, that’s it for now. Ballet resumes Monday, Tuesday I go in for Supplemental Instruction Leader training, Wednesday there’s moar ballet! and therapy, Thursday we’re off to Connecticut to visit my parents, planking all the way, ha-ha-ha!