Friday, July 10

Singing and Telling



I'm currently in the throes of VBS. Beginning Sunday night we will be performing a 20 minute play every night on the life of Moses. I'm really enjoying the opportunity to act again- even though my lines are small and my role is largely supportive. The only thing is that I had a solo to sing on the first night. Had.

See, the song was "Tomorrow" from Annie. They had changed the words and I was supposed to sing for about three minutes tops. Did I mention that the main character in Annie is a young girl? And that I sing alto? It wasn't working very well even though we tried a few different things to lower the range and keep me where I needed to be. It was pretty much a train wreck. The only thing is that Moses has a huge costume change during the song so we couldn't just cut it.

So tonight I talked to our director and Larry suggested that we try something different. Instead of me singing- what if I used my fabulous education to (get this) tell the story. He asked me to go home and work on a short bit of storytelling that we could work with. So that's what I did tonight. I came home at 10:30 and looked up Exodus 2. I wish I had more information about Moses' life while he was gone from Egypt, but I think what I've got will work. I'll let you know how it goes.

Thursday, July 9

Sleeping Beauty

She lay stretched out, completely relaxed on the bed. Her golden hair spread out on the pillow around her face. She has slept for what seems forever. This is certainly not a normal night of sleep, or a normal nap. She slid into this sleep like a leaf drifting down From a tall tree to float on the surface of something deceptively deep and swift.
How long she should sleep is unknown. She waits for the clear, handsome face to peer down at her, to beckon her to wakefulness and the life she was certainly meant for. Years passed in which she was unknowingly shielded from the difficulty of the life that came as her birth right. Until that day when she crossed the protected boundaries of her childhood and stepped into the harsh reality of her adulthood.

And now she sleeps. Just for now. For, soon enough, a handsome face will peer down at her and reach over with his hand placed just under her jaw and say, "Tickle Tickle Tickle!" She she will wake to her prince- her little prince.

Tuesday, July 7

Once upon a time...

One thing I would like to start doing is posting a new story each week. I can't guarantee it will happen (as a matter of fact I can almost guarantee it won't happen this week due to VBS practice) but I can say that it should become a recurring type of post. To be honest, I'm not sure where to start, so I thought I might get some ideas from anyone who is reading this blog...

So to get things rolling... What fairy tale is your favorite and why?

Thursday, July 2

The Black Bride and the White Bride

In fairy tales there is a naturally recurring theme of a false bride taking the place of the true bride. The false bride is often referred to as the Black Bride and the true bride is referred to as the White Bride.
Joan Gould talks about these two as two halves of the same woman. Often we see marriage as the fulfillment of a set of relationships: daughter, friend, lover, mother, sister... "With this ring, I become everything I am meant to be!" we should say.

However, the reality of the expectations of these relationships is often overwhelming- even oppressive- and enters the Black Bride. She is hideous. A shrew who is completely self-centered. The Prince wonders how he could have been so duped as to marry such a evil, foul woman, who is so obviously not the angel of the house he believed her to be...

What woman hasn't found herself transforming (some days when the kids are too clingy, or you find nails in your washer from your husband's pants) into that ugly, selfish witch? You want to love them and be everything for them, but part of you just wants to escape to the hammock and read, or find a quiet corner to paint, or just come home at the end of the day to find that your house is clean and quiet and no one is wanting anything from you. And yet, we also long for a home and family and people to give ourselves to. We long for someone to love us, and grow old with us. How could we not? No one wants to be alone, especially women, whose very DNA calls them to seek out the best genetic material available and procreate.

And how do we reconcile these two aspects of ourselves? Fairy tales seem to suggest two options. In The Black Bride and the White Bride the White Bride is revealed and the Black Bride killed. Do we really want to sacrifice our Selves to our children and husbands? If we did, there would be no Black Bride.

The other option lies in another story I've mentioned recently- the story of the Seal Wife. (I managed to find this copy of the story, but itis only briefly mentioned among other information about Selkies) In this story the wife is forced to abandon her true home, and after many years of marraige and bearing children, she finds her seal skin, and returns to her home. In some ways this story is slightly disturbing. What mother would abandon her children? And yet, she is not just a mother, but a beautiful creature who had been forced into servitude- although it wasn't exactly slavery since the story does say that she grew to love her husband. However, the story also makes it clear that her children were old enough not to be completely dependent on her, though that doesn't make it much less horrifying that she abandoned them.

Somewhere between these two extremes lies the key to a happy wife and mother. She does not put her Self to a gruesome death, but she also does not abandon her family to swim in the solitude of her own individual indulgence. The key is balance. Much like the rest of life, balance offers the opportunity to be both the dark and light aspects of Bridehood. How do you pin that down? Is there some method that we must all learn to execute in order to retain our essence without letting it drown us?

Perhaps that is the fairy tale I'm looking for.