Archives for March 2014

New Website Updates

Just a quick update today about some new features to the website that I worked on over this past weekend:

An Updated Studio Map

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All of the studios have been added to the map on the Studios Map page, and you can visit both the studios website as well as the description and reviews found her on ABP.

Easier Ways to Submit Studios and Reviews

There’s now a convenient link on the side to add information for ballet studios and reviews on the “Add a Studio” page. The forms are now located directly on the page to allow you to more easily submit them.

Be Featured Page Updated

The same feature has been applied to the “Be featured” page located under “About.” Submit yourself, a friend, a ballet instructor to be featured on ABP.

More Newsletter Options

As I wrote on Saturday, there are more options to subscribe to ABP that are now fully up and running. Read more about them here.

Still to Come: Contributors Page

I’ll be adding a list of contributors to the “About” section as well as looking for more guest bloggers for ABP. So if you’re interested, shoot me an e-mail at adultballerinaproject@gmail.com!

Would You Rather Ballet Edition: What Would You Ask?

A while back I asked if any one would be interested in doing a “Would You Rather” type poll in a ballet fashion (much like this one is one for running) and quite a few people were interested.

I haven’t forgotten about it, and I wanted to make it open to readers to submit what they’d like to see in the first series of “Would You Rather” questions.  An example would be:

Would you rather do 100 tendus or 50 pirouettes? 

Leave your submissions here (and feel free to submit multiple):

I’ll keep it open until Sunday around 5pm and the post will go live sometimes next week.

Guest Post: Turnout in Your Twenties

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It was the fouettes that got me.

My ballet obsession would be nothing without the film Center Stage. There’s that moment at the end of the performance where she just spins like a carefree top, making it look so effortless and liberating…I wanted to do that.

I started learning ballet rather late in life, the ripe old age of 24. After musing about it for a few months, I’m a little embarrassed to say that a tumultuous break-up was the catalyst for my first class. I needed distraction and a way to express all I was feeling. I got that and then some.

My first time at the barre I felt like an imposter.

Before my first class, I observed dancers stretching in full splits, working their turn-out, and doing so with a calm expression, exuding a sense of confidence and experience in their motion. Not knowing anything beyond “first position,” the next hour and half proved to be one of the most physically challenging times of my life. However, it also proved to be a sincerely exhausting mental work-out.

I’ve heard many dancers say that they dance because of the moment when “it all fades away,” except for the music and their movement…there’s some sort of magical ‘zone’ they find themselves in, like a safe place to just let everything else go.

Naturally, I knew I wouldn’t find it right away, my own little zone. But I wasn’t quite prepared for the amount of mental work it takes to get through even one ballet class, my head swimming with French terms, combinations, and of course, massive self-doubt.

Where could this alleged zone of freedom possibly exist in all the confusing thoughts buzzing around my brain?

Not to mention, when I started out I felt like an oaf.

The mirrors flanking every inch of the studio served as a constant reminder that I tower over most other women in the class, at my sky-scraping 5’10” height. But, in time, I’ve learned how to have more control over my long limbs (developing muscles I never even knew I had!) and now when I feel myself slouching to be shorter, I raise my spine up with pride. I work through my frustrations with my height and remember that though I stand out, I will have an immediate presence and I try to find strength in that length.

Dancing requires one main thing: movement. Tall, short, thin, curvy, slow, fast. The ability and love of expressing ones’ self through the body is something to be respected. No matter if you’re 5’4” or 6’0”. No matter if you’ve had a thousand ballet classes or are just rising to relevé for the first time.

In the past year, I’ve seen some beautiful glimpses of my little zone of freedom, where my brain stops thinking and my body continues moving…pushing out the stressful noises and the worries of what’s going to happen next year, in a week, in 5 minutes. I won’t hear the ring of my nagging cell phone, I won’t read a ‘catastrophic’ email, or a text saying I’ve missed a deadline. My little zone is a moment of pure elation held exclusively for me, that I can find when I stop doubting myself and let go.

 Check out Beth’s blog Trees and Toes.

Newsletter Update: Daily or Weekly Option

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Remember awhile back when I lost all of my e-mail subscribers? I was pretty upset. Fortunately, I was able to set up a pretty quick system for those of you who wanted to quickly subscribe to daily e-mail updates to do so.

Finally I’ve gotten stuff together and there’s now a decent way for those of you who want to get a weekly newsletter from me. Let’s face it, sometimes those daily ones can get pretty annoying. If you’ve already subscribed to get e-mail updates via MailChimp from me, you’re already included on this list. The newsletter will come every week on Sundays at 10 am (got a better time suggestion? let met know).

If you’re not subscribed to either option, both can be found in the sidebar to the left (as well as a way to subscribe via Bloglovin’).

How do you prefer to read blogs? Daily or weekly updates or via a Feed Reader?