Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Compelling

I have had two wonderful life altering experiences in a week. Sunday was a day where I discovered what artistic perfection meant, and today is the day I became a part of a structured teaching movement.



The San Francisco Ballet is one of the oldest and most established ballet in the world. Every year they produce performances which leave behind a sense of absolute admiration by the audiences that experience the magic of art taken to the level of effortlessness. As indicated in one of my earlier blogs- effortless is a manifestation of beauty that is achieved after it manifests as competent, magnificent and divine which means its at the highest level. Read the blog again here:http://somethoughtsoftough.blogspot.com/2008/08/excerpts-from-four-manifestations-of.html

As I sat in rapt attention as angels(my interpretation of the ballet dancers) flew by and sailed through forms colors and music I realised what it meant to be a true performer. If one could achieve beauty and magic to this extent, doesnt it serve to say that existence as a pursuit of perfection is achieved?

What is life if it cannot induce passion, pleasure and power?

The ballet artists created these emotions collectively. The dedication, commitment and single minded pursuit required to become a dancer of this calibre would only allow these dancers the distinction of being torch bearers.

I have seen time and again that the emphasis and appreciation that our forefathers gave to the the encouragement and growth of arts and pure sciences is on a downward spiral with our generation.Our sense of achievement usually doest recognise the impact of the arts as much as our recognition of academics. We tend to focus on a child's growth and perceive education to be the means through which you get high paying tech jobs - it is only a perception- as this form of education limits one's natural need for expression and by and large affects the freedom to appreciate, enhance and commit one's time to the pursuit of an art form.

There are trends that indicate in India that there will be more and more people who will be able to afford a higher standard of education for their children, however, due to the availability of lucrative jobs teaching as a profession and a passion is considered a complete no no by people who have a potential to make a difference. What is the point in earning and being able to afford better education if there wont be quality providers? I wouldnt want to get into diminishing returns theory but I would want to consider the prospects of the future of our children. I speak so loftily of encouraging arts and pure sciences what if our children wont be able to discern the interconnectedness of the two?

I don't want to give any answers to these questions as I believe each of us are capable of choosing our paths and understanding the needs of an unborn generation.

Maybe this ted video may add some more thoughts:


I added this video as it reiterates my need to find answers to the questions that ran in my mind and I think I have found a start - by volunteering through a structured program of teaching and being involved with children who belong to homes that come under the poverty line(which is less than 15K of drawn salary in a yr by the parents of the children according to state laws) And I think doing it through the district makes this voluntarism accountable and measurable from an impact perspective. I do not want to either belong or encourage volunteerism as a fad. It cannot be an option because you have nothing else to do but because this is what you have wanted to do always.

More thoughts and compulsions will follow...

1 comment:

Sindhu said...

Very interesting entry - I really enjoyed reading it. The questions/points you have raised about science vs art rings true in my head too.

You have a nice blog. :)