Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Problem Child

There are times as a parent where you clearly see echoes of your own idiosyncrasies in your kids. Case in point, my youngest kid's absolutely intractable stubbornness is a frustrating mirror image of my own, though we're both getting better. A little.

On other occasions, parents often get to experience aspects of their kids' interests, aptitudes, and attitudes that seem wholly unfamiliar to our own. My eldest, who goes by k (lowercase intentional), is a brilliantly charismatic performer, fierce and fearless. And neither my wife nor I possess a scintilla of whatever gene sparked those attributes.

Sometimes, the two poles mix, and we get to see our kids as the delightful mix of us and them they were destined to become. At the end of the month, my eldest culminates their collegiate dance career by presenting a significant piece of their creation. Senior dance majors at VCU are required to cast, choreograph, and stage a performance of their own making. The overall theme of this year's senior performances is Two Truths. Half of the class presented their work last semester. The other half, including my kid, presents theirs the last weekend of the month.

Here's where we get to the multitudes contained within. Check out this description of my kid's work, as they wrote it, and as it'll appear in the program for the performance:

“this is a secret language. this is a cult activity.

“problem children” investigates the idea of queer movement, and its capabilities of transformation – from human into creature, from language into gibberish, from legible into queered. informed by improvisation, writing, choicemaking, vulnerability, honesty, silliness, and the embrace of a queer sensibility, “problem children” aims to plunge the audience into a creature world, from which they will emerge bewildered and full of joy.”

I see a whole lot of myself in the joy, silliness, and honesty. And I am baffled by a lot of the other elements, even as I know they're exactly how my kid sees themselves and represent issues and ideas they wrestle with as they find their place in the world.

When the seniors presented a draft of their work to the dance faculty a month or so ago, k's advisors were generally approving, but told them to feel free to let more k come out in the work. In other words, let k be k. I'm anticipating an outrageously unusual, silly, giddy, awkward, challenging, and fun piece. And I fully expect to emerge bewildered and full of joy. If you're in the Greater Richmond area the last week of the month, come join in on the cult activity.

20 comments:

rootsminer said...

Cool stuff, and the genetic material is obviously somewhere in you and and your wife.

My 18 year old got asked yesterday to join a short tour with the European Royal Classical Ballet, performing the role of the jester in Swan Lake. He's pumped to get a hundred bucks a show, and travel, lodging and meals are covered.

If you're near one of the tour stops and so inclined, tour dates are here: https://ercballet.org/swanlake

rob said...

that's awesome. let swaney know about the lynchburg show - that dude could use some culture.

OBX dave said...

Admire the onions and certitude of youth. *is* a secret language, *is* a cult activity. "... plunge the audience into a creature world, from which they *will* emerge bewildered and full of joy."

No equivocation. None of that, 'This is what we hope to convey' or 'We believe in transformative power of expression.' Strap in and here we go.

Mark said...

This is really cool. As is the invite for Rootsy's boy. Awesome to see kids/young adults become passionate about something(s) and grow into themselves as a result of it.

Professor G. Truck said...

i want to be plunged into a creature world!

rob said...

you would.

also, see you in richmond at the end of the month. don't you have a cousin there?

Marls said...

The Juice has been squeezed

zman said...

Teedge is beside himself.

T.J. said...

rip nordberg

rob said...

what a weird, sad fucking life for that dude. the juice, not teej.

zman said...

Dude averaged 5.1 yards a carry, 110 yards a game, and 1539 yards a season from 1972-1976. Those were all 14 game seasons and he played in all of them. OJ, not Teedge.

zman said...

He played in all *70* of them, although he only started in 69 of them. Make of that what you will.

Whitney said...

His downfall was as colossal as anyone’s in recent history, and it is sad until you consider the two people whose lives he furiously ended. Teej, not OJ.

Marls said...

Strange that we are all older than OJ was when all the shit went down.

Professor G. Truck said...

i see OJ . . . and he looks scared

rob said...

psyched to see dechambeau on top of the leader board. any by 'psyched', i don't mean psyched.

Whitney said...

hi gheorghies

Marls said...

Hello Whit.

Whitney said...

Wow, Timmy. Nice work. Mine was a cheat, as I’m in Spain for the weekend.

Marls said...

Mine is a bit of a cheat as well. I have a suboptimal work project going on and I’m talking with some Aussies at very odd hours.