[Tango-L] Missing Magic
Alberto Gesualdi
clambat2001 at yahoo.com.ar
Tue Oct 13 14:13:25 EDT 2009
We live in the present .
Our ego clings to the past and our mind tries to hide into the future because it does not like a present continuous as it happens to be.
If we can dance at the dancing floor, and leave the mind at the wardrobe , there is no missing magic.
Our mind makes stickers of everything we thnk of , what we are, what we wear , what we look like, how we dance, how we were , how we used to look like.
We need to see the mind as ourself a witness within a process of thought , and then the mind will atone (with some complaining , yes , but will atone). And we dance , here and now.
alberto
________________________________
De: robin tara <robinctara at gmail.com>
Para: Trini y Sean (PATangoS) <patangos at yahoo.com>
CC: Tango-L <tango-l at mit.edu>
Enviado: mar, octubre 13, 2009 2:50:31 PM
Asunto: Re: [Tango-L] Missing Magic
Thanks Cherie, Nancy, Shahrukh, Keith, Nina and others who wrote off list
with comments on this thread.
You've all been around this scene for a long time and have experienced,
more or less what I was getting at.
I want to apologize to anyone for whom my posting seemed like an admonition
to forego the tango experience in Buenos Aires. Or to imply that going to
BA these days won't thrill you at all. Both Cherie and Nancy described the
kind of magical experiences that still exist there.
As is always the case, we bring ourselves and all our foibles and experience
to the milonga with us. Many have written about this much better than I can,
so I admit that much of my dismay at the milongas these days is of my own
making.. The other is that we have lost many of the "tipos" that made the
milongas fun. Think of Pupi, Omar and Gavito, to name a few. Not to mention
the old milongueros who are leaving the dance floors because of illness,
poverty or death.
Hope you'll all understand that it makes me sad, that;s all.
On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 4:41 PM, <macfroggy at aol.com> wrote:
>
>
> "Did the world really change around
> me, or did my perception of the world change?"
>
>
>
> Sure, it's not as it was in 1997 on my first trip here, when foreign
> dancers were a novelty. Maybe middle-aged foreign women are a dime-a-dozen
> today, and we are less "special" than we once were and are treated more like
> we are "back home." After dancing tango for a decade or more, "we" are also
> different. This nostalgia for what used to be, that life, people, things,
> milongas aren't what they once were, is very tango!
>
> But Buenos Aires will always be the Mecca of Tango.
> And every serious dancer will make the pilgrimage one day.
> It's worth it.
>
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