This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

The Lost Shoe and Thirty-Four Years Later

A story of thirty-four years of happiness to the heart and brain.

Ethan, Ava and their parents (my son, daughter-in-law and two youngest grandchildren) came from Northern Virginia to visit us. It was the second time Ethan age six and Ava four came to Grammie and Grandpa’s home. It is a long trip to come here and finally they made it.We always go to their house every few weeks.

Grammie and Grandpa cleaned and dusted and swiffered the whole home to ready themselves for this momentous occasion. They were tired from all the housework but were so eager to have the grandchildren make an appearance in their home.

After Ethan was here for an hour or so, he said “I like being here.” That warmed Grammie’s heart. He played around, ran around and had fun. Grammie never said the word do not or no when he touched her little ornaments or china. She had not taken anything away to put out of little children’s hands because Ethan and Ava are well behaved.

Find out what's happening in Hunt Valley-Cockeysvillewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

There was a little china ornamental blue and white shoe on a table in the entrance foyer.

Ethan looked at it and said “that is a lost shoe.” How perceptive of him thinking it was a real shoe once and now it was misplaced. I got to thinking about the lost shoe and surely thought here is a good theme for a dance article. So here goes.

Find out what's happening in Hunt Valley-Cockeysvillewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Many times in our lives we may feel ‘lost.’ The meaning lost can be misplaced, missing or even lost in thought. Lost in thought is sometimes what we have happen to us. We think about something too much or not enough and we feel we have lost something. Many of us dancers think about stopping our dancing because it is too expensive, too time consuming and too much thought goes into it. We could possibly not have time for all the necessary thinking dancing entices us to accomplish.

The first night way back in November, 1977 that we took our first serious ballroom dance lesson was quite different from what I expected when I thought about it that day before we got to the studio. I speculated that it would be fun, it would be different and it would be interesting. I never realized how much work went into learning new steps, new arm movements, smiling when dancing or even standing up straighter with our posture.

We took a little spiral notebook and after the class, my husband tried to remember to write down some little points we had learned. Then we went to a nice restaurant that we frequented often and were quite proud of ourselves for getting through it and still smiling.

We left the restaurant and went to a record store to buy some dance records so we could practice to dance music before the next week’s lesson. In those days, there were no CD’S, no DVD’s and no Videos. They were ordinary large records and we found a whole section for dance music. We purchased about four of them and the next night we played them and tried to remember what we had learned. Our little Pekingese doggie named appropriately Rhumba hid under the sofa thinking what was wrong with these people.

We were told we should try to purchase suede soled shoes for better and safer dancing. So I had heard about a dance shoe place in Virginia named Amber Dance Shoes. There was no internet in those days to view the pictures of the shoes. I called the owner and she said she would send me out a brochure to see the types of shoes available.

She did and that was the beginning of me ordering many dance shoes in various colors, heights, comfort styles etc. From high heeled silver and gold shoes, some with sequins and stones to others with flat and plain heels and leather material. When I wore my high heeled ones, I felt like my favorite female dancer known to me then-Ginger Rogers. Even my husband ordered a pair and he would not admit it but I know he felt a bit like Fred Astaire when he wore them.

So Ethan thinking the china ornament was a lost shoe reminded me of our first dance shoes. Sometimes when we take a lesson, we find it hard to comprehend what we learned. We may feel lost and think why I am putting myself through this. For what?

Then our sensibilities take over and we realize we are not lost, we are found. We have found something so fantastic that our journey has just begun in this dance life.

Journey it is and the word journey also means voyage and adventure. That it is and more than one can ever fathom. A trip so complex, so wonderful, so awesome and so very delightful. I hear people say that dancing probably saved their sanity and even their physical life.

By that they mean that they were just about to develop some physical ailments, some minor and some more complexe and when they decided to try ballroom dancing, many of the mental symptoms vanished. The reason being because they became occupied with something out of the realm of illness and therefore focused more on positive happenings.

They did not concentrate on not feeling well and therefore balanced their life with more positive feelings.

All psychologists will vouch for positive thinking being a force so dynamic that it sometimes outweighs negative thoughts and negative happenings. When we are more positive it is said our health improves. That is not to imply that illness can be cured by positive thinking alone, we still need our professional medical help and sometimes medicines but that positive feelings do override negative views.

Now if you are in a car accident like we were in 2008 year, positive cannot help the ailing knees or back or contusions, but it can get you on a faster journey to wellness.

Ballroom dancing no matter where you perform it will enhance your life to such high altitudes that you will wonder how you lived without it all these years.

As the years roll by and you excel and advance in ballroom dancing your life will be fuller and richer than you could ever imagine.

I have a home full of ballroom dance objects. If my home was ever written up in a decorating column in the local newspaper, the theme would be Dance and more dance.

The walls are decked out with photos of me dancing in showcases, of letters and tributes about dance and professional paintings of dance. My shelves are full of Lladro figurines in lots of dance positions. They are ballet figurines, Tango figurines and couple dance figurines. Anything that shows any kind of dance gets purchased by me. You could say I am obsessively caught up in the circumstance of the movement of feet, arms and soul. They are also filled with the fifty-eight trophies and medals I won in my competition phase of my ballroom dancing days.

In a former article I spoke of dancing for the meat bones at the local butcher shop when I was a wee little girl. Now I am a senior and dancing is the meat of my life. This meat has no cholesterol, no fat, no grease and no sugar. It is full of the flavor of creation of movement within in the body and within in the soul. It increases the flow of thought in the brain and helps one to cope with daily adversities and sadness. It increases the desire of accomplishment in life and as we age, we need goals to strive for

To learn is to get high without drugs, alcohol or spending money on frivolous items.

To achieve in a sport or hobby called ballroom dancing at any age is as Shakespeare said about something else that it was a ‘gift in thy brain.’

To ballroom dance is an endowment of genius, quality, talent and aptitude. We endorse this with all of our heart and we want everyone who wishes to dance to try it and to savor the responses they will get in their life.

As little Ethan, my number three grandson said this is a lost shoe, but only if we let it be lost to us. We take that shoe and put it on and dance the days and evenings away and it becomes a gift in thy brain

Laurence E. Miller of Maine, our first dance teacher from 19-77-85 said in an email to me this week –

“Thank you for being a living testament to the spirit of dance-ballroom or any other dance. It is people like you who can help people know how dance can save the day, the year and even life.”

Laurence and I are going to write a book on ballroom dancing and hopefully it will be published next year 2012.

Tomorrow, November 2nd will be thirty-four years since we had our first lesson and thirty-four years later, it is a blessing of love, social activities, caring people, fun and good mental health. Bravo to ballroom dancing and bravo to all of us who participate in it and honor ourselves by being dancers, especially in our senior years. It is a gift to our brains and hearts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Hunt Valley-Cockeysville