i wanna dance with somebody.

{photo credit}

I used to dance in high school. I think I may have told you this before, but I’m not sure. I was pretty serious about it too. Pointe shoes, dance camp, the whole nine yards.

Then in college I kept up with it to some extent, but less for serious and more for fun.

I miss dancing a lot. Sometimes I think I should take a class, but I know it would never be the same. I actually tried a ballet class a few years ago and I held my own pretty well. I was really proud of myself for doing such a good job, keeping up with the steps and jumps and spins. I couldn’t walk for a few days after, and going up stairs was pretty much torture, but I did it. Ok, ok I might be exaggerating a little. But anyways, like I said, it just wasn’t the same.

I think for me, one of the best parts of dancing and being a dancer, besides the thrill of moving through space, were the friends I made. It’s like any sport or hobby, really, you find a connection with other people who have a love for the same things you do. It’s happening to me now with blogging in the same way.

So anyways, I have the specific memory with some of my closest dance friends from college. We were an eclectic mix really, all so very different, but that’s one of the reasons I loved this group of people much. We all loved to dance and the rest didn’t matter.

It was spring vacation and while the rest of our school was away at home or off drinking on the beach on some island in the Caribbean, we were spending our time at a dance festival (taking classes, performing, watching all kind of glorious dance). We were getting to know each other better and better, which is what happens when you spend every waking moment with people, and at the end of one of our last days at the festival, as we were leaving the parking lot, I had this incredible experience I will never forget.

Whitney came on the radio.

This song.

I remember it like it was yesterday.

Without even discussing it we stopped the car in the middle of the parking lot, blasted the music as loud as it would go, opened the doors, got out, and started dancing.

We lifted our heads to the sky and threw our arms open wide.

We jammed and swayed and felt that music in the deepest part of our beings.

We just danced and danced like dancing fools do. Not a care in the world, not a bit of worry or embarrassment or self-consciousness.

We just danced our hearts out. All 5 of us right there in that parking lot.

We danced to Whitney and we loved it.

And forever I will love that song because it reminds me, truly, of when I was young and wild and free.

a day at the beach.

This post wins the prize for most photos in a blog post. EVA.

But I just couldn’t choose, okay?

I might not know how to edit out pictures, but I do know one thing: I wish every day was a day at the beach.

(You can view my summer pictures from Chatham here and here.)

Happy Tuesday!

 

home is wherever i’m with you

{Home}
Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros

a

Everything about this song reminds me of my friends from high school whom I ADORE.

It started playing on my Pandora yesterday morning as I drove to work and it made me miss my friends so much I actually started crying. At 7:00 in the morning I was balling my eyes out behind the wheel of my car.

No BIG deal.

Sometimes this happens to me when a certain song comes on, or there’s a sappy commercial on TV, or when Ellen and Jeanie help change someone’s life, and also in any episode of Grey’s Anatomy there ever was.

I just simply cannot help myself. My emotions run high and I find myself choking back tears. Realistically, this happens about once a week. Usually, it’s good tears. Good, happy, heart-strings-pulling tears. But every once in awhile I get some sad ones in there too.

Yesterday I was mostly sad because I’m missing Bailey’s baby shower this weekend and I wish so badly I could be there. I miss my friends terribly right now and hate sometimes how we are scattered about here and there and everywhere. I wish we could all just magically arrive and be together and be laughing and making memories. My first friend to have a baby and I’m missing the shower!

But at the same time yesterday I was crying happy tears. Because this song makes me utterly joyous and reminds me of the goodness of our friendship, and the best times we’ve had, and how lucky I am to have found such amazing women. And how soon, soon! we will have a baby to visit and hold and love.

Happy and sad tears were happening yesterday morning and I just needed to cry it out.

So thank you, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros for your perfect song that never fails to take me home to my friends just when I need it the most.

MAINE

Sunday was one of those days where you have to pinch yourself to make sure what’s happening around you is real. Except when you pinch yourself you can hardly feel it because you’re extra numb from the cold. For some reason, I didn’t mind it, though. The air felt fresh and much needed, like that tall glass of cold water I love to drink at the end of every day.

It was so peaceful and serene as we walked along the trails by the water in Freeport. The snow was perfectly new and the light was so bright it woke me up from the winter haze that comes across me during those weeks after the holidays.

I needed this weekend and I’m glad for it.

It reminded me that winter is good and beautiful. Sometimes I get so stuck on warmer days and I don’t give winter its proper credit.

Winter is important in its own way.

Winter is cozy and refreshing.

Winter loves the sunshine and pretty light.

Winter is strong and solid and good.

Winter helps start the cycle again, settling the earth and preparing it for what is to come.

Winter makes way for spring.

And summer.

And fall.

I am lucky to live in a place with seasons so that I can appreciate each one in their own way. This weekend’s winter was too gorgeous not to love, and it was nice to be reminded of it.