Thursday, November 02, 2006

Great dancer, OK singer, can't burp....

Most people who know me well know that I'm a vocalist. It took me years to get over the whole insecurity that went along with acknowledging that I'm good at it... not because I was afraid people would disagree, nobody has so far. Rather, because I had this overall sense of discomfort associated with publicly accepting that I'm not only darn good at something but, in fact, better at it than most people I know. It goes back to a previous blog about arrogance - if people know that I know, they'll assume I'm arrogant and that I do it because I like the recognition. Not true, though. Music is therapeutic to me. It's a constant. It is a perfect blend of art and math that allows my otherwise logical and unemotional personality some opportunity for creative expression. But enough about that...

A smaller subset of people who know me know that in college I minored in dance and majored in psychology with a pre-med course load. I wanted to either be a dance and movement therapist, or a clinical neuropsychologist. I sliced, diced, stained and studied many a rats brains....

What few people know is that upon entering college, I auditioned for a music theater scholarship. I returned to the panel after giving my best dance, singing and acting performances to be told, "You're a great dancer, an OK singer, but you can't act." Mind you, I don't deny that statement one bit. I suck at acting. I can't even tell a white lie convincingly.

Nonetheless, nearly 20 years later, certain opportunities have presented themselves once again. I am on my third year running of an annual performance. The first year, it involved tons of singing and a few lines. The second year, the amount of singing remained the same but I was given more lines and asked to choreograph a dance! Year three, still the same amount of singing, the same dancing, but my character has been changed to a drunk who throws out occasional comments that have mostly to do with finding more alcohol. However, this year a new and interesting challenge has been presented to me, for the directions in the script at one point require me to belch on command.

I'm in my mid-thirties and this is not a talent I ever mastered. I'm not even a novice. I don't have the slightest clue how to do it. Furthermore, the only responses I've received when asking for advice have been either, "It's easy, you just swallow some air," or the person just musters up their best eructation and walks away.

Life is funny. After traveling the world, climbing the corporate ladder and keeping up with the Jones', this is what it has come to. And to think, just a few short months ago I found myself pondering one of life's deepest questions, "Now what?" I guess I have my answer.

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