Tuesday, May 31, 2005

End of the rainbow



I saw the end of the rainbow today.

Driving home, there was a brilliant full arc in the sky, shadowed by a fainter one. You could see the entire rainbow, and the road ran through it.

The sky was thunder-grey, the trees brilliant yellow-green. The power had gone out and with it the traffic lights. We stop-and-go'd down the two-line road. Passing a meadow, I could see the whole rainbow slanting down in front of the evergreens, into the grass.

19 pounds

I have lost 19 pounds since Christmas.

Sunday, May 29, 2005

Create an abundance of abundance




Poverty takes a year to begin to recover from.

I first noticed this with time-poverty. My first year off, after 17 years of software overwork, I was frantic. It took a week... a month... three months... twelve months... to soak up the time. I was still uncoiling. I remember sitting on Lisa Dawes' back porch under a flowering cherry, drinking tea on a Tuesday morning, the whole week empty before us, discussing the play I was writing & she was directing -- unable to comprehend the wealth in which I found myself. I kept inhaling the soft air, sneaking peeks at the cherry blossoms. It felt unreal, stolen.

When I returned to software after dangerous financial poverty, it took a month... two months... six months... twelve months of regular infusions of money, to regain wholeness. Three months before new glasses; six months before I cut my hair. I was still learning to release the tension.

It's like dry earth baked to hardness. Water runs off. At that level of deprivation, it's a matter of mist, of dew. You have to seep a little in... then seep a little more... for the earth to become receptive.

This weekend is the first unclenching since starting work six weeks ago.

On a deeper level, it is I who have been manifesting poverty even within abundance. My alignment is Self-Care; I am starting to see how much of the poverty was self-created.



Self-care is a recursive bootstrapping mechanism; a golden key that unlocks everything.

To create abundance, create abundance. Create an abundance of abundance. Enough time AND enough money AND enough space AND enough rehearsal AND enough prayer AND enough love AND enough time in the forest AND enough physical sweat AND enough downtime AND enough doing what you were put on this earth to do.

Eventually, a good pianist needs a full-length concert grand piano -- because nothing else can answer & evoke. But they only need one. The right one.



I love Mickey Hart's book, Drumming On The Edge of Magic, because it answers, "What do you do when you have enough of everything?" The answer is, "Go get what you're missing," and "Follow your impulses." His impulses led to tracking the history of percussion in little index cards that covered the whole inside of the Grateful Dead's barn. It looked like those fantastic magazine collages (which I crave to create) the Beautiful Mind guy made.
Go deep enough into any one thing
And it will take you everywhere.
Czikszentmihalyi, the Flow guy, says one of the characteristics of Flow is that the activity becomes autotelic -- pleasurable in and of itself.



I am in Flow when I blog at home or at Kinko's. It's not blogging that is leading me everywhere, though; it's theatre -- born (as they say of horses) out of software, by teamworx.
Everyone finds their own path to the Odin.

Three-day weekend

I am having a great three-day weekend. Very few things to do, Sunday empty, the house to myself.

Only another poet, perhaps, can fully comprehend the necessity of going timespun -- where you don't have to track a thing, not even the hours or the days, sleeping or waking -- because there is enough empty time to drift.

And because you've earned the time, and everything else is getting taken care of.

Without rebellion, with swords

At work, I am aware of all the currents in the fractal. My rebellious side still sees, reflexively contracts -- but it's not driving any more. It's just data.

Eugenio Barba says we create theatre from our wounds. I think we create everything from our wounds.

When we start to heal -- although Eugenio would perhaps say some wounds are always with us -- we can create different things. The wounds don't leave; but the other can also be embraced. We get the resonance between our wounds and our glory; life and death, the mortal and the divine. We create wholly. The metaphor starts to approach reality.

Lear was a cranky willful arrogant man who wanted to determine publicly which daughter loved him best. This was not an act of love. Out of this -- "All things contain their end in their beginning," says Lyon -- came his howling on the heath.

This is why the great playwrights, if they start writing at 20, don't start creating their masterworks till they're 40. Why the great theatre directors don't start making the truly sundering works till after 20 years of work. And why masters like Eugenio or Leonid, who have 40 years of practice, are so incredibly rare, and so vitally to be treasured. Eugenio's latest piece, Andersen's Dream, is about death as if death is not important and is real, all at once. A lightness that does not deny; white figures in the snow, in white cotton-lace dresses and summer suits, having a barbecue.

I am trying a new way of working. Everything Peter suggests or Joshua says, I do. I lie down, take off my skin, and let ivy grow all through me. Connect to the ecosystem instead of severing from it.

I still use my own wisdom; I do not go blind. But I don't reflexively rebel and isolate.

I am now on a different path from my father's.

I took both my iron swords to work Friday. To feel their weight as I walked through the halls. To remind myself that my projects are as real as these swords. To feel that where I work -- in software Games -- I am surrounded by people capable of grasping the entire metaphor. Of perhaps grasping me.

I love the minds where I work. They are muscular, nourishing, fast, skillful.

I worked a bootcamp of all physicists once. Their minds were patient, deep, all-connective. Systems-dancers. What was striking was the quality of their listening and reflection. The physicists would let you speak, uninterrupted & unrushed, for hours. Then, after an unhurried pause, they would check to see if they had understood the entire thought you had laid out. They were not impatient to say their own idea. They were absorbed in completely understanding your proposition. It didn't matter whose idea it was. It only mattered that the whole system got better understood.

They were experts at not perturbing the system. They knew how, at a certain complexity, things need to be laid out purely and completely. Network architects know this; and games-AI programmers. All the guys who work at night. For years, all my writing was at night -- psychic space, no disturbance to delicate complexity.

I remember one guy's Alignment that bootcamp, the thing he craved to make him whole, was Deep Thinking -- to create even more time & space for thought.

We used to have a guy, Kevin McCarthy, whose Gift lay at the opposite end of the spectrum. His Gift was Quickness. He had a huge capacity for action/input/stimulus in the present moment. He could handle 12 windows open at once on his screen, all active, all imperative, and be talking.

What if there are as many Gifts as there are humans? Now I see how important the internet is; it lets each person leverage their Gift.

"We designed the internet to be unbreakable, even in war," said Ken Harrenstien. "It wasn't till more than 20 years later, in Desert Storm, that it first got tested. It passed," he said. I don't think it was the design alone, though; it was how robustly the internet has grown to become everyone's ecosystem.

The internet is a shared vision. Everyone thinks of it as "My internet." In war we bomb cathedrals; I wonder if, finally, we have built something no one would bomb because we all need it too much. I wonder if the internet is Danny Hillis's 12,000-year clock. Rome's roads survived.

I once drove past a corner lot in Grass Valley, California which was being turned into a strip-mall. The guys who had just cut down every other tree on the lot, were having their lunch in the shade of the remaining tree. How do we honor the truth of Ecclesiastes's cycles, and short-term thinking, and scarcity, and economy -- and preserve our planet?

I do two ultra-slow-mo Suzuki practices -- slow-tens, which are slow-mo walks; and shakuhachis, which are slow-motion cycles of getting up from laying limp on the floor, moving -- typically walk & walk back, but often I slow-mo dance instead -- then returning to the floor.

I used the swords for Suzuki work, one in each hand. I felt them as extensions of my arms, as my bones. Feeling how they extend power; are power. I used them in slow-mo Shiva sculpture-walks. Then I used them swiftly, iron cutting air like fast encircling fish as I spun. Then I melted, using them as fluid -- as water, my longings, my dress, my hair, my breasts, stroking my cheek, kissing my lips, slow on my tongue.

Using swords in a completely soft way felt magnificent.

A sword IS a metaphor. I can be iron-soft at work. Everywhere. All the way iron, all the way soft.

I'm about to switch metaphors. There's something about rosebushes and gardens and forest ecosystems that better approximates my complexity.

Like Leonid Anisimov says, "Look to Nature." And, "Look on the most high and most beautiful, as long and as often as you can." Even in yourself, I would add.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Book of books

I read this bookbinding book yesterday.


A book of books


A similar book by the same artist


Back of the book

Daniel Ellig, who made these books, says
Often I use old bibles with exceptionally thin paper, which has a nice drape and flow. One of my favorite things about bookbinders is listening to them justify tearing up old books. I don't have much of a problem with this, because the books I alter are not rare, and they've lived their lives. Bookbineders have been recycling books for 2000 years. In some of the first Coptic books, wood was scarce, and the binders would take old papyrus scrolls and laminate many layers together to make book covers that are close to an inch thick.
The picture I really want to show I can't find anywhere. It's another book of this guy's, where he bound 6 or 7 books of all different page-sizes onto one spine, in one set of covers. A literal book of books.

Recursion.

Friday, May 27, 2005

Zatoichi: The Blind Samurai

I watched Kitani's Zatoichi: The Blind Swordsman last night. I saw The Last Samurai five times in Denmark when I was living at the Odin; the samurai village was like the Odin.

I am thinking of how both movies had a samurai who was a master-trainer, who basically beat the shit out of all the students. The difference was, in The Last Samurai he was harsh, unforgiving, brutal, but clean; in Zatoichi, he was sadistic, relishing extra-cruel beatings.

What struck me about The Last Samurai was the same thing I noticed when Jake Harter, from my Vision Team, walked into a boxing ring with a guy two weight-classes above him: Anything which did not make him stronger, would get him killed. In The Last Samurai, it wasn't until those seven guys surrounded him, that I realized -- if the swordmaster had been an ounce softer, more forgiving, Tom Cruise's character would not have survived.

I like classical forms. They ruthlessly asymptotically demand perfection.

I also liked Zatoichi's percussionists. Like the group Stomp, they used their whole bodies and implements to create rhythms. That was a correct resonance to have in the film. The demands for that level of rhythm are as exacting and physical as for swordplay.

On a completely other tack -- I saw Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty recently. This guy thinks like a theatre director. I had seen his The Last Emperor, which also blew me away. Stealing Beauty made me decide to see everything he's ever directed.

Whatever is cracking in me, in life, is cracking in the kinds of movies I like, too. I am now needing them to be as nourishing as any other art.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Glorious day

The sun has come. The air is sweet, the wind is warm, the trees are a riot of green. We turn pale faces to the lambent sky.

Which actors walk into the room

I say I teach acting, but that's not quite accurate. What I do is train a group of people to act, while having them co-create work that is on my path. If I am not making work that's growing me, I lose interest in teaching. I need the orthogonality of training and performance.

An ongoing challenge is how to bridge the gap between where they are and where I am; it keeps widening. I have to invent new structures; break my own beliefs about what's hard or easy. As soon as it's easy for me, I know how to make it easy for them. There is always infinite hard stuff left.

The first day is like Christmas. All these actors walk into the room. Sometimes one or more -- enter who make you revise all notions of what's possible. "YOU're here? Oh man, well, to do something that would stretch YOU, and me, we'll have to do..."

I noticed yesterday in my team meeting that I can look with those same director eyes, and tell which actors were in the room.

The part of me that goes, "Oh MAN" at a formidable actor, did that again and again. I totally revised my notions of what's possible on the project, after registering their massiveness. And the unconscious rough alignment of the team. I know what to do with them. It's shackling not to have the whole theatre armament available -- things would go much faster with statues, mooshing, slowtens, and exponentially-expanding awareness -- but I can feel rehearsal mojo in the air.

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

If it wants to storm, become the storm

My resume looks full of fun jobs. But the truth is, most of it was not fun. It was agonizing, stressful, brutal. The stuff on my theatre resume was more fun... but even that, not entirely.

Well, right now, my life is fun. It feels like a shimmer. No one thing is the river; the river flows unseen under it all. It's all particles in the mist. They are the right particles, and there's enough space between them for me to breathe.

It's the resonance between stuff that's nourishing.
- fun projects
- hard work environment
- good pay
- deep housemate, deeply connected
- clean and shining house
- nature everywhere; an explosion of forest and stream
- a fun/hard/good friendship growing
- therapy
- life-coaching
- foreclosure in process of being averted
- bills getting paid
- rooms getting cleaned
- connections & support being restored, extended
- an explosion of blogs and expression
- good food
- starting to move
- a gym membership
- health care
- taking theatre-consciousness into the world

What it really is, is integration. My selves are merging. I can see the mandala in reality and the reality in the mandala. I can feel the strength & fragility when I switch modes, and I always know which mode I'm in.

I am taking what I know in the rehearsal room and starting to apply it in life.

It's alignment. I am finally me, authentically, everywhere I go. There are still variations... but there is not abandonment. I no longer jettison my needs as the first step of simplifying the problem-space. Not that one actually can; and not that that simplifies it either; it just moves the key part of the problem out of consciousness, and thus leaks it all over the rest of the space.

My life is becoming just right for me.

I am also -- this comes straight from rehearsal -- not fighting or denying the organicity of growth. Yesterday was a black rebellious day. Only because I let that day be as savage and bad as it was, can today to sparkle. "I want to eat bad food!" myself said fiercely. "Okay," I said. "We will eat bad food. What do you want? How much?" I ate it all. Potato chips. AND cream cheese with salsa. AND chocolate-chip-cookie dough.

The first thing I noticed is, it felt great to authentically eat -- to have all parts of me saying "Yes." And I noticed, when the rebellious part got joined by the full-force strength & support of the rest of me, it a) didn't need that much food, and b) then revealed what else it needed, which was house-shakingly loud metal music, dancing/leaping/rolling, declaiming Shakespeare, chanting long improvisatory poetry, followed by more Shakespeare, then an early bedtime and FINALLY enough sleep.
And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,
On your imaginary forces work.

Suppose within the girdle of these walls
Are now confined two mighty monarchies,
Whose high upreared and abutting fronts
The perilous narrow ocean parts asunder:
Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts;
Into a thousand parts divide on man,
And make imaginary puissance;

Think when we talk of horses, that you see them
Printing their proud hoofs i' the receiving earth;
For 'tis your thoughts that now must deck our kings,
Carry them here and there; jumping o'er times,
Turning the accomplishment of many years
Into an hour-glass: for the which supply,
Admit me Chorus to this history;
Who prologue-like your humble patience pray,
Gently to hear, kindly to judge, our play.

-- Shakespeare, Henry V, Prologue
For sun on rain, you have to have the rain. If it wants to storm, become the storm.

why phase 2 of this blog

By keeping two blogs -- this one and rawumber -- as well as some private ones, I realized that I had grown constrained in this one. I love having 240 readers a day, but I was paralyzed by everything I wasn't saying. I want to feel free in my blog -- well, free, modulo not disclosing any confidential work info. So I declared phase 1 at an end to permit myself a fresh start.

Here beginneth phase 2.

"Will there be recipes? Crochet patterns?" asked Rob. Only if it's what's hot for me, Rob.

Monday, May 23, 2005

Swords and vocals

I am listening to Mozart's Magic Flute, the Bei Mannern, welche Liebe fuhlen duet, a baritone and mezzo-soprano wheeling like larks.

My life feels like a tapestry shot with gold.

I brought two swords and a boombox to therapy today. As I was waiting, another client entered. "Hey," he said, his eyes lighting up. "Swords. I didn't know they had those here." "They don't," I said. "You have to bring your own."

Last week, I was sitting in the rainbow-haired guy's office, listening to his band on his website. It had him on guitar & vocals, his wife on bass, and a drum machine. It was driving me nuts. The bass and guitar were good, the vocals were getting there, but the tickety drum machine kept a lid on everything. "You have got to get a drummer," I said. "Drummers are a pain," he began. "You need a good one," I said. "And, you've gotta sing. You're not singing." Affronted, he turned up the volume and began to sing along, to show how much edgier he could get. "No," I said, "SING." I joined in to show what I meant, much more rasty, pushing it. Just as we were getting a good howl going --

-- there came a knock at the door. It was our dev lead, with another developer in tow. "Uh, hate to break up the party," he said, grinning.

Back to work.

Here endeth phase 1 of this blog




New winds are blowing. I want to mark the change.

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Mentor

I picked a mentor at work. Today was our first meeting. I chose him because a) he did my exact job very well, and b) he leaves work on time every day. I want to do both those things.

I am in a new space for learning. It's like there are cracks in all the walls. I am willing to consider dissolving any habit or belief, if it looks like another will get me a better result.

Michele McCarthy says, "If you only learn one thing this week and that is to ask for help, that will have been $5,000 well spent."

The three pieces of advice I got from my mentor were at precisely the points where I was stuck. I could see a way out, after getting help.
salmon born in the
river find in the sea strange
undreamed companions

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Meeting by the river

There is a river by my work. I had a meeting yesterday, and I like to walk and talk. When I was a manager, almost all my one-on-ones were walk-n-talks.

I figured we'd take several laps of our sprawling parking lot. But no -- it turns out there's a river right by work, with a long path.

I can't tell you how much this helps. There is something about having Nature nearby that quiets me and helps me concentrate. On interview days, I kept taking breaks to gaze at the big poplar out front. A greenbelt runs along two sides of our campus.

During rehearsal breaks Leonid Anisimov, my master teacher, would go out into Nature to refresh, reground. I picked up this habit, and now do it at work as well. Looking at bark, or water, or leaves, I remember that whatever's worrying me is only a game we invented to entertain ourselves. The real thing is this, Nature, and underneath we are all part of its flow.
games we invent are
as real as a frog; greet both
while the moon fattens

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

Eugenio looks good

"How is Eugenio?" asked Phillip Zarilli.
"Good," I said, considering. "He looks good."
"He always looks good," said Phillip ruefully.
I laughed.

It's true, though -- Eugenio does always look good. He is awake, present, slim, incisive, open, listening, declarative, engaged, ready. He has always been lean and athletic, and in his late 60's, still is. He dresses with an Italian man's unconscious confidence, barefoot in sandals with a good cotton shirt, jeans, and a leather vest.

It is part of his overall integrity. His life works and he is at the center of it.

"Eugenio is doing what he's always done," I said. "He is doing what's before him, that is next to do. But recently, the things that are before him are very large. Like, for the Odin Teatret's 40th birthday, he made a whole new ensemble production, Andersen's Dream. They began work on that three years in advance. Plus, they are establishing the new Center for Theatre Laboratory Studies, which required building an entire second floor onto the theatre. These are the correct things. Necessary. And now is the time to do them. But they are expensive, too."

The only way out is through.

I am comforted by how Eugenio faces, accepts, and accomplishes his responsibilities, especially in the large sense -- the responsibilities of an artist to look far and high, and to do what he is called to do, regardless of the difficulty, while at the same time keeping everything going.

He could never do this alone. These are big visions, involving the entire Odin and a wide network of other organizations and people.

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Making room

I washed my shower, my sheets, and my bedding. Starting the transformation spiral from the center. I am sleeping in five-hour chunks, dolphining toward tomorrow.

My office is dim. I usually bring in lights. I have a huge 4' x 6' white art table --heavy-duty engineering bench, actually -- which I custom-designed in 1990 to be precisely the right height when I stand. For years I brought it to every office I had, even the one in Australia.

I like having half my office a busyness of computers and papers, half an emptiness of white.

But lately, with the Xbox, the table always becomes a gear bench. There's just not room for a computer, a monitor, a laptop, an Xbox, a dev kit, a tv, controllers, a playspace, AND a giant empty art table, all in one micro-office.

I just reread that sentence and had to laugh. My big problem is not enough room for all the toys.

Home green home

John picked me up at the airport. He drove me home the back way, through explosions of green. Issaquah, Preston, Fall City, Carnation. Through the green belt, past the river, trees overarching the road. My eyes were pits of hotness. I would open them to glimpse green, then rub them shut again. He bought fries and a diet coke at the hot-dog stand in Preston. I ate six of his fries, eyes mostly shut.

Last night I slept 14 hours. I dreamt I had a conversation with Joseph Lavy where we were finally moving about the work instead of talking -- two kinesthetics. He would show his idea, I'd show my response, until the conversation had become the work, including a chorus of 12 I had introduced. "13," said Joseph. "12," I said, realizing we were 14. I shrugged, we stayed 14, singing. Jennifer had taught us all to sing. I woke, drank thera-flu, felt myself again.

It is raining. My favorite weather. Out my kitchen, I see green upon green, stretching past the pond to the far trees -- grass, licorise grass, sour-leaf weeds, white-pod grass, buttercups, drowned bent dandelions with half their skeedyweedies gone, giant ferns, fiddletop ferns, light-green-tipped firs, a great patch of Himalayan blackberry, alders, cedar, poplar. Leaves tremble. Water drips onto brown-black earth.

My house feels like the Odin. I walk barefoot on its gleaming floors, embraced by silence. Every window and door is open. Perhaps I love the Odin because it feels like my home.

...And on that thought, I went out to check my gutters. The one on the back deck was overflowing. I brought out the red high chair, and cleaned the gutter, a handful of mucky pine needles at a time. Rain and needles ran down onto my hair and shirt, off my bare feet. My jeans were soaked. A bird had built a nest of great strawy twigs between the outside lights and the eaves. I counted five slugs. I finished cleaning, swept the back deck, threw all the slugs out into the grass.

Then I walked in thigh-high grass around my whole house, slowly, still barefoot, checking the other eaves, the holly tree; seeing what had sprouted since last summer, pulling blackberries. I looked at the sacred grove of three cedars, leaned against one of them.

Finally I lay down in the back grass. I gazed up through cedars, alders, and vinemaple at the white sky. Laying on my own earth, in my own rain, I relaxed.

A hawk flew over. I closed my eyes and rested.

Flying home from Europe with a high fever, my sense of smell had burned out.

Friday, May 13, 2005

I'm sick

Too much travel in too short a time. I could afford the trip by being willing to connect all over the place. In the last 24 hours, I flew from Exeter to Dublin to Milan to Munich to Copenhagen to Karup, then drove to Holstebro.

My body has shut down. Cough, runny nose, and a desperate need to sleep. Which I'm off to do, now that my washing has finished.

Tomorrow I fly home. Karup to Copenhagen
toooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Seattle.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

Hallelujah

I am yearning for beauty. Can't find the Li Po poem I want, so here is a gorgeous bleak Hallelujah. They played it an hour ago in this Dublin airport internet cafe and I can't shake it.
I've heard there was a sacred chord
that David played, and it pleased the Lord
But you don't really care for music, do ya?
It goes like this: The fourth, the fifth
The minor fall, the major lift
The baffled king composing "Hallelujah"

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Your faith was strong, you needed proof,
You saw her bathing on the roof
Her beauty and the moonlight overthrew ya
She tied you to the kitchen chair,
She broke your throne, she cut your hair
And from your lips she drew the Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Maybe I've been here before,
I know this room, I've walked this floor
I used to live alone before I knew ya
I've seen your flag on the marble arch
Love is not a victory march
It's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

There was a time you let me know
What's really going on below,
But now you never show it to me, do ya?
I remember when I moved in you,
Your holy dark was moving, too
And every breath we drew was Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Maybe there's a God above,
And all I ever learned from love,
Was how to shoot at someone who outdrew ya
It's not a cry you can hear at night,
It's not somebody who's seen the light,
It's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

-- Leonard Cohen

Grotowski, 36 just men

I am reading the memorial service held in New York, in 1999, for Polish Laboratory Theatre director Jerzy Grotowski who had recently died.
Theater has been a great adventure in my life, it has conditioned my way of thinking, my way of seeing people and looking at life. But I didn't look for theater. In reality I always have been looking for something else. But I would say that my language has been formed by theater.

When I was young I asked myself what would be a possible job that would enable me to look for the other one and myself, to look for a dimension of life that would be rooted in what is normal, organic, even sensual, but that would go beyond all this, that would have a sort of axis, another higher dimension that would surpass us.strong

At that time, I wanted to study either Hinduism, to work on the different techniques of yoga, or medicine, to become a psychiatrist, or dramatic art to become a director. It was the Stalinist period, censorship was very heavy. Performances were censored, but not rehearsals and the rehearsals have been for me the most important thing. There something happened between a human being and another human being, that is the actor and myself that touched this axis beyond any control from the outside.

It means that the performance has always been less important that the work in the rehearsals. The performance had to be impeccable, but I always went back towards the rehearsals even after the premiere because the rehearsals have been the great adventure. In the end, it has been this search for the human being in the others and in myself that lead me to theater. But it could have lead me to psychiatry or to the study of yoga.

When I was young I had a professor who gave me private lessons without being paid. He was a great wise man and a specialist in Hinduism. When I began doing theater, I invited him to a performance but he refused. Why, had he refused, I asked him? He said, 'Because no matter what you do, it will transform itself into a hermitage.' Now I find myself with my present work, beyond performance and any public work, with the artists looking for this interior axis, I find myself, as he was saying, in an hermitage.

-- Jerzy Grotowski

In my tradition, there is a spiritual understanding that there are always thirty-six just men in the world. These thirty-six do nothing less than keep alive the searches and the world of God. I have no doubt that Jerzy was one of the thirty-six.

-- Bill Reichblum

One of the many stories Jerzy loved was the story of Bal Shem Tov who went to a certain place in the forest, lit a fire in a specific way and practiced a specific meditation of prayer. Over a long period of time, after his passing, the specific words of the prayer were lost. Then the specific way of lighting the fire was lost. Then even the specific place in the forest was lost. This could be perceived as a disaster, a complete break from the past. However, the lesson is that this was not the case, because at least, we still have the story.

-- Bill Reichblum

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Exeter

I talked with Phillip Zarilli about psycho-physical practice. Buddhism came up over and over, as did Polish theatre companies, Gardzienice, Odin, singing, the Dalai Lama, Kalachakra Initiations, Asian cultures, African, ancient Athenic military training.

I met with three Exeter PhD students. This is how they typically structure their programs:
- Before coming: Research Question. Decide specifically what you plan to explore. How you plan to do & document it. It can be any project(s), anywhere in the world, with anyone, as long as it is related to theatre, has a practice ("doing") component, and is justified in terms of your inquiry.
- 1st year: Foundation. Prepare, do background reading, learn methodologies, organize the projects and people, plan the trips.
- 2nd year: Research. Go do the projects. Document them, on DVD, a journal, photos.
- 3rd year: Write thesis. Put your findings in context, cite the main papers in the field, pass your exams, get your committee's approval.
- 4th year, if needed: Finish thesis.
That's a good structure for me. Consistently, however, I feel more at home in the companies than the schools.

I am about to begin the long unspooling of returning to each previously-visited city for a day or less -- which is how I was able to afford the trip.

I can't wait to get to Holstebro. Where there is a washing machine, a hard bed, good work, and silence.

Monday, May 09, 2005

There are other earths and skies than these

Awake all night again. My body refuses to leave Seattle time. Normally I adapt in 2 days.

I think it's because this time I cannot forget the broader currents of my life. I think about it all -- how to set up & light my office, structure my days, tackle my projects, lay foundations, plan my course.

A baby is squalling, a street-grinder is whining, a bus's brakes squeal as it stops outside the internet cafe's open door, and the techno beat drives. "Uhh- tigguh-zoop-tigguh-Rolling. Uhh- tigguh-zoop-tigguh-Rolling. Uhh- tigguh-zoop-tigguh-Rolling. Uhh- tigguh-zoop-tigguh-Rolling. Uhh- tigguh-zoop-tigguh-Rolling."

I have been awake 32 hours.
They ask me why I live in the green mountains.
I smile and don't reply; my heart's at ease.
Peach blossoms flow downstream, leaving no trace --
And there are other earths and skies than these.

-- Li Po

Sunday, May 08, 2005

Your body is the gate (sestina)

To travel much in time and not in space
Is harder than the pilgrim's wandering lot
Choose any country for your company's base
The funds will be your first and biggest gate
Your life, there comes a point you must oblige
Or miss the ferryman and his sweet yacht

Forty years of winds have brought this yacht
Your purity has bought for it a space
It will not stay for asking or oblige
You must take the decision, cast your lot
Say no protective chants, approach the gate
Take off your clothes, step naked on the base

When you are whole, your heart's your only base
Green waters close around you, vanished yacht
Your trembling truth is all the paltry gate
But that's enough to point you to a space
Use everything you know, embrace your lot
Be tender and be strong, be true, oblige

Devote yourself, vow that you will oblige
The stranger at the door who seems so base
Your candlesticks of gold may be his lot
But ethics and self-care your nimble yacht
YOU MUST LEARN TO SING -- send into space
Vibration which itself becomes the gate

Commitment to yourself reveals the gate
It asks that you your yearnings soft oblige
Hold nothing back from love's fresh-flowering space
A tender heart knows nothing can be base
When nourished, you become a straight swift yacht
Coursed true in mildest winds, or stormy lot

Integrity is now your faithful lot
You must obey the secrets of your gate
This, even if it means you lose the yacht:
Reveal your thoughts, grace all whom you oblige
The gods will send sweet partners for your base
And for your inmost heart, a husband's space

Your body is the gate you must oblige
To stretch a lot, touch, kiss, and stride is base --
This yacht is your sole chariot through space

Gong

Today I am a gong rung seven times.

In the morning I prepared for Eugenio. I had assembled a book of Odin blog posts, and brought a copy of Himalaya, the astounding photos on which my play Nanda Devi was based. "These are very unusual," he said, looking slowly. "Nothing like what you imagine when you think of a mountain." "Truths," I said. "Truth on every page."

I saw
- a film of Grotowski's Cieslak, training Tage
- a film of Iben training in front of Eugenio
- Tage training Mia, using techniques of Cieslak, Iben, & Grotowski
- Iben speaking to Mia afterwards, clarifying a step
Bam. Bam. Bam. Three generations of lineage; four with Grotowski, five with me.

This afternoon I got my time with Eugenio. I came on this whole trip to speak to him, I realized.

I knew tons, right away. I couldn't write fast enough. I fell for two hours into deeper and deeper sleep, before staggering back for Cities Under The Moon. Where I knew more. And more. And more.
It doesn't do any good to list it, when miracles and thunders come so fast.
I am supposed to leave tomorrow. I need to paint.

I need a huge canvas, tons of paint, and days and days to get lost in. Green, it whispers, emerald green, glitter green like that Byzantine cathedral, put the cathedral on top of his head, gorge on detail.

I am stronger now. I rise farther into the indigo sky. I don't even try to keep up anymore, I just shed and fall toward Saturn.

When the old ways can't get you there, use new ones.

Friday, May 06, 2005

We don't know what we're making

We don't know what we're making when we're making it. We don't know what we've made when we are done. Even those watching sometimes cannot see what we have made -- they can only feel their own reactions to it.

The Odin's Anderson was of the same shimmering density as Kama Ginkas's Chekhov -- Rothschild's Fiddle -- or Leonid Anisimov's Lower Depths. Soft supple master actors, and shining layers of reality piled up and vibrating until without noticing you are inside the poem; you have become the haunting.

The whole thing cracks, and you with it. This happens in many Odin pieces. It's not a conscious, or consciously constructed thing. It is the result of many truths. The first several jar you from your surety, then one detail jolts you agape. You are like a door, swinging on its hinges -- and then you have no door.

There was no happy ending. "And no tragic one either," said Eugenio. This is a formidable accomplishment. I felt echoes of Hans Christian's loneliness -- or mine. There were explosions of stillness where I could breathe. Snow. A sound like boulders singing. Trees scraping their branches. A man with Kantorian repetitiveness, swinging, swinging, kicking his knees and swinging.

But mostly, there was that vibration and sundering that means the piece has broken you tender. You know it's a woman in a red dress with a white mask and a mandolin, and yet the third time she passes, she's the only real thing in the space -- neither the walls, nor the spectators, nor you yourself are real, compared to that lost planet, lost fragment of time, which orbits singing.

They say that children who have known loss draw trees with holes in them. I think Eugenio has people being shot for the same reason -- it feels actual.

It was a fractal. The whole play felt like Andersen, and each of its pieces came from his stories. Same with Chekhov -- his moments and his plays feel like his life.

And then there were the deeper reverberations because of the given circumstances -- the exoticism that comes with taking the play out of its home, and placing it in new surroundings. This only happens if you have shown your home faithfully.

"My wife left me," says the furrier in Lower Depths, "For another furrier who had better pelts."

Snow in Denmark is normal; in the Italian summer, it is exotic. The way the Odin sings in their own halls is usual; in an old church in Bergamo it is strange, untraceable. The way the zanni move their hands -- a motion that once was winding yarn, and now has become pure glyph -- echoes in our hindbrains.

At one point an actor on top of the end-bridge dropped a grenade into the snow-lit entrance. We all turned at the sound. It lay like a pine cone, inert, spotlit. The onstage actor addressed it, finished, left. Then a girl spectator leaned over and picked it up. It was not a grenade or a pine-cone after all -- nor even part of the performance. It was her cell-phone.

You could not think up all the things in Andersen. You could only discover them iteratively by doing.

What I noticed about the chapel across the street was how real each stone was. Someone decided to make a dome. Someone decided to make a line of small vertical bricks, this far apart, as the trim. Someone decided to put this stone here, and that one next to it. The moments of the Odin play were as precisely chosen as that chapel.

There is no blurriness in art -- only choice, far commitment, integrity. Art is the search; it is left to the observer to name, to infer, to interpret the metaphor which remains as a by-product of that search. "Every track ends, finally, with the skull," says Tom Brown, the Native-American-raised author of Tracker.

Truthful search leaves in its wake reverberation -- loose ends, associations, paradoxes unresolved, possibly undiscovered.

We don't know why Hans Christian kept making paper cut-outs. We just felt them suddenly splash over us, projected silhouettes on every wall and mirrored roof and floor, across our bodies and faces -- a hall of silent alleluia. No one ever explained. We just gazed, absorbed.

"Whatever you least expect, that is what will happen next," said R.A. MacAvoy out of the blue, a one-sentence paragraph in one of her books. It was the only time she spoke in that voice in the entire trilogy -- and even with that forewarning, what came next was unexpected.

Bergamo birthday, glimpses of Eugenio

"No, no," said the taxi driver. "Arlecchino no from Bergamo. Arlecchino from leetle leetle village BY Bergamo. I no remember the name." That is even more beautiful -- that Harlequin is not from a small town after all, but from an even smaller place outside it.

Those of us who grew up in the country, 20 miles away from the place outside the small town, understand perfectly.


This is Bergamo. Behind you, out of town, lie tall grassy fields, leafy trees with black trunks, a river.




This is where Odin performed Anderson's Dream, the grey building on the left. Unbelievable stones, acoustics, archaic human theatrical scale.


This is the chapel you see through the arch, as you wait for Anderson to open its doors.


This is the courtyard of the university, built in an ancient church, Sant' Agostino. The inner secret courtyard, which you only find if you continue past beyond the first algae-stoned dilapidated one. It is far more ruined that it appears here -- and more powerful. This space cries for Greek theatre.

And this -- imagine jeans, brown & pink flowy v-necked top, black jacket -- is me on my 48th birthday. Standing in soft air, singing in a high almost soundless voice, waiting for Andersen . Doing slowtens from the infinite sky of the piazza, toward the baroque chapel, singing. Sitting with Mia, who bought me a strawberry & chocolate ice cream & capuccino, and gave me a yellow rose. Watching the snow drift earthward in Andersen, and realizing how Danish, which sounds normal in Holstebro, sound absolutely mysterious in Italy.

Thinking.

Feeling.

Reverberating.

I listened to Eugenio's talk at the conference today. I was glad to hear him in his native tongue, on his native soil. He looked slim, imperative, clear. It was his own legend he told, of coming to Norway, to Poland, to Grotowski, to the Odin.

Listening to Italian is like watching fish from the dock. I catch only glimpses, sometimes a sighting. I get 30-40%. I catch adjectives, miss nouns.

At one point he was describing how he and Grotowski would converse. "But then I realized," he said, "That everything about how we talked -- the vulgarities, the trivialities, the [---], the duration, how long we talked, everything -- was in fact an exact reflection of [---]." It KILLED me to miss that point. I was dying to know if he said, "of our process," or "of our company" or "of the production." Lost, vanished.

I asked Jusy afterward. "I do not remember this point," she said, rubbing her head and trying.

The mysteriousness... the incantation... Cyrano de Bergerac... my chest... the sonority... traditional theatre, very professional, very good professional actors... I had lost the sonority... Theatre of Art of Stanislavski... Vakhtangov... Kamerny Theatre... There was small book published in New York at this time, very important book. It described the famous conference where Meyerhold [---] and it said very clearly that [---]. This is incredibly important because [---]... She laid the table very particularly with many many points of [---]... Polish theatre school... Grotowski... I took comfort... I took solace... Grotowski does not say this to the actors of course, but to me he says [---]... The Polish think of themselves as the Pieta... the Polish believe very strongly that [---]... The scenographer of the Akropolis production was architect, genius. He had lived 4 years in Auschwitz and he [---] the tunnels, the boots... Grotowski and the actors, they absolutely [---]... the founding of the Odin was based on not, on negative... we all had jobs... the incantation... desperately... most extremely... I watch... the [---] of gold... closed/ended...

Ferme. Perdido. Sonorite. Extremissimo. Teatro. Quanto. Que. Mysterioso. Molto, molto. Polognie. Pollacka.

Today is my compleano.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Rolling the die

I am looking at two large white lilies, still fresh on the bibliotek table. I have just cleaned the kitchen, washing many small glasses of Italian coffee. Emanuella made me lunch with brie cheese, and showed me pictures of Dawid, her garden, her room, her escutare, her friends. It made me wish I had pictures to share. Francesca just printed two research papers for me to read. Small treasures from the mountain to be archived.

It is silent at the theatre today. A Danish holiday celebrating Denmark's return to sovereignty, after being ruled by Germany for 5 years. Last night in town all the stores were open late, a band was playing, you could fish for wriggling wind-up plastic fish in a blue blow-up water-pool outside the toy store, and crowds were eating ice cream and thronging. At the bookstore, they had a small die in a leather cup. You rolled the die to see how much percent off your purchase you got -- 10% up to 60%. You could roll per item, or once per the whole set. I got 30% off everything.

Lili and I were relieved to return from town. It is like coming home to the monastery, to return here. Silent, sweet, carved powerfully deep by the intention, attention, and work.

Work is the core.

I can't start thinking, I must pack.

Birthplace of the Harlequin

I'm off to Bergamo in 45 minutes. Bergamo is where Arlecchino, the Harlequin in commedia dell' arte, was born -- the archtypal Fool. I think it is an auspicious place to enter Italy.

I shall be attending a 3-day conference & work-demonstrations, "Conference At The Circumference," än exchange of theatre legends and practices. In the evenings, I'll see three of the Odin's performances:
Andersen's Dream
Inside the Skeleton Of The Whale
Cities Under The Moon
I do not really take vacations. I take things like this -- intensive learning/growing experiences.

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

Hiding in plain sight

I just reread much of this blog. It feels like hiding in plain sight -- saying but not fully; not revealing.

I'm ready to say, precisely and completely.

A blog might not be the right forum.

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Girl clothes

I bought new shirts and pants for my vacation. I am down two sizes from the last time I bought clothes. So I chose fitted tops -- sweaters, blouses. These only look right with good posture. So even though I'm sitting at a computer, now I sit straight.

This monitor is a foot too low.

Buckminster Fuller said no one could hear him, when he began speaking the truth, until he started wearing a suit. He went out and bought four identical black suits, and black glasses. It solved everything. He wore those (or their replacements) the rest of his life.

So here's what I brought:
pink tailored long-sleeve cotton blouse
light green tailored cotton blouse (same cut)
black v-neck sweater
brown & pink knit scoop-neck top
pink & red knit scoop-neck top (same cut)
thin silky purple long-sleeve v-neck top
red BCC sweatshirt (for the plane rides)
A new era, my friends. Girl clothes.

Monday, May 02, 2005

There is only one thing you must do before you die

Holstebro is not different from Seattle, it just lies in a different place. My job still feels real here, my seshes, my kitchen dishes. The painting that is quivering there calls me to paint here --- but it is the same continuous urge, the same me.

The night we performed Noir, I stood in the rain, feeling made entirely of emerald. I feel that way almost all the time now. The corona of illusion is dissolving. What remains is real.
There is only one thing you must do before you die.
Do not forget to do it.
It is not, as I had thought, "Create a theatre." It is, "Become yourself."

A tree that must be taken special care of

There is a word in Swedish for trees that have grown very large. The word is vardtrad (with a little O over the first A, two dots over the second one), or literally, "Care-tree." It means, "A tree that must be taken special care of." If you buy a house, the real-estate listing shows photos of the house, the garden, the garage, and the vardtrads. A school might have one, or a neighborhood.

Leonid is a vardtrad. And Eugenio, and the Odin.

I love both the concept, and the fact that it's built into the language. You cannot say, "The big tree." You must say "The tree that must be taken special care of."

Sunday, May 01, 2005

It takes a theatre to raise an artist

When I lived at the Odin a year ago, I felt like a stranger. This time it feels like home. A group house I still belong to.

"There you are," said Lilicherie, as she showed me into the quiet two-bed room just off the music room. There is a shower-room outside mine, and a bathroom beside that. The music room has shining goldwood floors, drums, gongs, and ukeleles, two small worn Persian carpets, Grotowski posters, theatre posters from around the world. "A l'Odin," "Por Odin." During Odin Week, we set up picnic tables and tea stations to make it a dining room.

I can't believe the change in my spine. How relaxed it feels this time. "I need to paint here," I thought as I fell asleep.

Last year, so much in me was getting taken apart in me that I didn't know where it would stop. I was rigid, while disintegrating. When everything matters and you don't know what's important, you absorb it all. Perhaps the way the washcloths are folded is important, when they're taken from the dryer and carried in a small tan plastic basket to the shelf by the redbrick floor. Perhaps the secret lies in the tall narrow hall cupboard where the banquet candles and tea are kept. I grasped onto the tangibles as an anchor against the great intangibles which were destroying me.

Now, my unconscious understands. The way it understands my own home, or Microsoft, or Australia.

"Have you been to the East?" asked Eugenio last time I was here, in that gentle voice which meant you should; you must; you will. Which meant, it is your education and your duty.

An artist, a human who has fully flowered in their Gift, becomes a towering banyon tree. They bring hope, shelter, shade, respite, strength. And yet, they are vulnerable; they grow.

"I am angry," Eugenio said when his friend Sanjukta Panigrahi died, "That we only got the flower of Sunjukta's maturity. We were robbed of the fruits of her old age." He built a high small hexagonal room, windows set high in the wall, on a walkway across from the theatre, called Sanjukta's Tower. It feels like a meditation room. You need a key to enter.

The new CTLS -- Center for Theatre Laboratory Studies -- is on the second floor. Eugenio ordered another tower built, like Sanjukta's -- so you can only enter the Center by first experiencing a climb through a sacred tower. "I am not the architect of this project," said the architect. "Eugenio is." That is as it should be. Eugenio is architecting far more than a building.

It takes a village to raise a child. It takes a world, the focus-lens of a director, the tinder of devotion, the unwavering ethics of focus, the sunfire of intention, and the power of the gods, to raise a theatre. (To raze a theatre?) It takes a theatre to raise an artist. It takes an artist to... create the parables?

Merlyn didn't talk to Wart, the young King Arthur; he turned him into a fish.

My glasses are held together with yellow theatre spike-tape at the right temple. I carry the spike-tape with me, a continual nudge toward self-care. With my second paycheck, I'll get glasses.

Maybe the next time I do a gods-and-mortals play, I'll make the mortals be gods who have forgotten who they are, but retained their powers. Now I understand theatre of the absurd -- Godot is never coming.

I am sitting at the laborante's computer -- "Laborante no more," said Anna, who joined the Odin just before I left. "Mia and Anna are pupils of the Odin now." She travels to the ISTA each year to be the onsite support. That is another spoke in my understanding of a laboratory theatre; of how to sustainably manage international connection. The heavy silkwater-gold fabric I gave the other Anna a year ago is pinned to the bookshelf, theatre-curtaining it. Beside me, Pushpa arranges papers at his small desk. Sigrid, who has done Odin finances for 23 years, came in to catch up with her morning cigarette. Soft Danish lilts through the theatre, and someone has made coffee. The workday has begun.

Without Eugenio and the actors, this is a different place. I wanted to experience this. "Light is the left-hand of darkness," say the Oshthregor, "Darkness the right hand of light." They are surprised I've come, and pleased.

"Jesus spoke in parables so the people could not understand," Jim Rapson says. "They have to go find the meaning themselves. That's how it becomes theirs." Ursula LeGuin's Left Hand of Darkness is such a parable. So is the Odin.

The tibetan buddhists say the great masters hid secrets down the timestream. So when a great spirit is born, it can open the secret at the right time.

The Odin is a shared vision

He who cleans the theatre, owns it. Everyone who comes to the Odin must help clean. Everyone who attends the virtual theatre owns it as well -- the participants of ISTA conferences, Festival of the Wind, Magdalena Project, Bridge of Winds; the Italian & Danish university pupils whom the Odin teaches; Odin Week participants from around the world; the readers of Eugenio's books; all the theatres affiliated with or derived from the Odin who keep in contact & exchange -- it is one great We, one making. The people of the Odin come from Norway, Denmark, Italy, Argentina, India, Brazil, Canada, Sweden.

Who owns the Odin? I do. I do. We do. I do.

The rabbis, when the Dalai Lama asked how to keep his religion alive without a country, said, "We took the sabbath into the home. The people own the sabbath now."

There is a Russian children's story called The Stump. "Who owns the stump in the meadow?" it asks. "I do," says the bear, "It is my great scratching post." "I do," says the squirrel, "It is my high lookout." "I do," says the ant, "It is my highway." "I do," says the termite, "It is my house." "I do," says the man, "It is in my field." Who owns the stump? asks the story at the end.

It requires discipline, vision, and heart to make something for the world. To make something infinitely precious for yourself, and give it all away. To know how to do that -- know what must be protected, what must be shared, what must be abandoned.

Silence

Odin is not a theatre, but a refurbished long farmbuilding which used to house cows and pigs. Great rooms of gleaming wood floors, with high ceilings and wide doors which open to the air, are the performing spaces. Tiny rooms, each with a sky-window and white monastery walls, are the offices & living spaces.

It is a building of peace. It is silent.

Except for the refrigerators, servers, and hot water pipes in the kitchen, all the other rooms have the utter silence of the countryside. Of the monastery.

It is as more silent than my house, even, and I keep my heaters off for greater quiet. In my house, I can always hear the fridge. Here -- nothing. It is as still as the fields around.

When a great peace is laid upon the spirit, a great peace is laid upon the work.

Welcome, Rachel

I am at the Odin Teatret. Lilicherie met me, driving the theatre's ancient yellow BMW trundle-van. The flight was an explosion of insights & writing. I was in that fazey state where you can ask any question and get an answer.

I cried when we pulled onto the crunchy gravel and parked. Cried again when I stepped into the familiar hush of the theatre, and again at the bibliotek -- my room to clean, which holds Eugenio's writings, the library, computers, and dining tables. More insights unfolded when I saw the new wing for the Center for Theatre Laboratory Research:
When you are doing your work profoundly, you change even the physical space around you. Which in turn changes you. Physical space is another aspect of bootstrapping.´
There is a tradition here, since there is no communal food, for someone to prepare a meal to greet a special guest. It is not people who meet you; it is simply the plain beautiful food. I have helped prepare such meals before. It did not at all prepare me for the impact of one awaiting me.

On the long table which seats 18 was a lone place setting. Two vases, one of white lilies, one of orange mums & heather. Two covered white china bowls -- one with steaming hot buttery rice, couscous, & green beans; the other with fresh-sliced cucumbers, fat small tomatoes, and fresh basil leaves in a vinaigrette. On a breadboard, a loaf of french bread, one green apple & a kiwi fruit, a generous unopened container of cream cheese, a round flat tin of unopened fresh pepper, and a bread knife. A glass-bellied pitcher of water. A drinking glass and a worn green tea cup. The dishes set out on a plain thick blue cloth.

"Welcome, Rachel!" said the note. "Kisses from Emanuella."

The bibliotek was empty. No one was there except the steaming food, and the gift of forethought.

Karin and Magnus came. They and Lilicherie ate with me. What performances have you made, where are you in your work, we asked each other. I showed them the giant Himalaya photos that sparked Nanda Devi.

Then it was time to go to Rina & Ulrik's daughter's confirmation -- a traditional all-day celebration in Denmark. Bookshelves lined three rooms in a jumble of Italian, Spanish, English, and Danish.

My body knew the way here. It was a long commute, but a familiar one.

And now -- sleep.
everything's the same
but more so -- what was missing
still gone; what's here, grown