A Blythe Coach

November was for Being Grateful & Grieving- 2024 Month 11 Review

November featured the full Beaver Moon, our last gasp of Autumn’s colors, art and culture at Museumsnacht Koeln, and a parade of birthday celebrations. Cooler temperatures even brought the first snow of the season, the earliest I’ve experienced since moving to Germany!

It being the month of American Thanksgiving, I took time to be grateful for my life and everything in it. I am truly grateful for all that I have and for my community especially (you!). Fortunate I was able to talk to my parents on the phone on Thanksgiving and so glad to hear them both well enough to enjoy a festive meal. Hope you had a lovely feast if you celebrate.

Sadly there will be no no official World Ballet Day in 2024, which usually takes place in November, but hopefully this online celebration of dance will be back in 2025. The first Monday in November was Fountain Pen Day and that is now a thing that interests me, as I dove into pens and inks this fall and did a good bit of writing during the month.

Mom’s knee surgery was a success, the U.S. Presidential Election not so much.

3 November highlights: cuddly flannel, Rufio, and pretty ink

November was not so easy

In teaching, the month was very productive, continuing to focus on well-being, self-care, Ballet technique basics & exam preparation for my students. Amidst an eventful and emotional month, I continued to create and publish and enjoy the artistic work of others.

Took good care of my own well-being as well, now that I have full Health Insurance coverage I’m tackling preventive care and my first stop was the Gynecologist. Things are fine, it’s a relief to be keeping tabs and be able to be proactive.

Honestly reeling with fearful imaginings of what disasters may come with a crook again as president of the United States. I needed to take time to process my emotions, then connect with and share resources for productively (and when possible, positively) responding to dire times, such as:

November BuJo Review – 2024 Month 11 Creative Journaling video on YouTube

Bullet Journaling & Planning

The above YouTube Video is a flip-through of the month in my Seasonal Book including goals, glows, media favorites, and events.

November brought a fall-ish, harvest & gratitude theme to my BuJo, and I shared my initial setup on Instagram here. I continued to update my Monthly, Weekly, and Daily logs and Annual Collections and especially reveled in setting up my December spreads. A bit of Christmassy decor was good for my soul.

Ordered supplies for my 2025 Annual and Spring Seasonal Books and considered my upcoming Word of the Year, themes and projects, visual design theme. Also watched a lot of fun videos of folks’ Notebook Lineups and Planner/BuJo Set-Ups for the New Year and it’s getting me excited, though I want to savor the holiday season to the full extent as well.

November Glows and Media highlights in my Bullet Journal

Teaching & Coaching

Regular Mindful Movement classes in Balletlicious Ballet Barre+ and Yummy Gentle Yoga continued throughout, and studio classes in Ballet and Barre a Terre continued, working at full capacity.

There are a couple of coaching slots available this season and I will keep you posted on further offerings as they come together!

First snow of the season and the earliest I’ve seen since moving to Germany

Writing & Publishing Articles

In November I published four articles to the blog:

  • Boo October is Through – 2024 Month 10 Review: I managed to vote in the US Primary Election and was worried about the outcome, as well as various other concerns personal and professional. A short visit with family members I haven’t seen in ages was lovely. Our weekend escape to Mendig with friends was a refreshing adventure. My new fountain pen hobby provided creative diversion.
  • Dealing with Difficult Developments – 15 Ways to Cope with Challenges & Setbacks: Hard times come to us all, so how can we bounce back and recover? Here are the tools that work for me when I need to cope with difficult developments and which I share with clients and students to support their commitment to what’s important in their lives despite setbacks.
  • Dance Daily December & into the New Year – 31 Days of Movement to Change Your Life: Right now we need to feel good and move for change more than ever, therefore I’m taking on a personal challenge to dance every day in December and inviting you to join in, too! Thus we will move mindfully and joyfully through the winter holidays and into 2025.
  • Sourcing Ballet Somatically – Pedagogical Approaches to Integrating Movement Techniques: This paper takes the approach of critical pedagogy to investigate practices in integrating somatics into teaching ballet technique. Originally part of my MFA in Dance research methods work in 2012, the conversation continues about how to best train dancers to honor the tradition of classical ballet while also educating the whole dancer and person in contemporary society.

Filming & Sharing Videos

My YouTube Channel and Blog have been where I’ve seen the most growth in visibility and with your help I may be able to reach 1,000 subscribers to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel before the end of 2024!

I published six videos to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel in November:

New Inks Old Pens: Creatively coping video on YouTube
October BuJo Review video on YouTube
Hot Mess Post-Election Pen & Ink Play video on YouTube
Take a Deep Breath Yoga Break 5-minute video on YouTube
Dance Daily December Invitation video on YouTube
Parker Pen Part 3 (the exciting inadvertent series conclusion) video on YouTube

Connecting: Email & Social Media

The best way to keep up-to-date on everything I’m coaching, teaching, creating and sharing about as well as my favorite work from other creators is to subscribe to my weekly email newsletter.

I sent four weekly Email Newsletters in November, full of value-packed resources for fellow creatives, and also posted four times to Instagram. It is my honor to be connected to you there, here, on social media, online and in-person!

We kicked off Museumsnacht Koeln at Ebertplatz at the Handle With Care exhibit

Creative Challenges

Some folks take on National Novel Writing Month/NaNoWriMo in November, and I have also participated in the past. Given my current focus on Memoir/Creative Nonfiction, my project for the month was creating a map of my life so far as a visual brainstorm of stories and structure. A new related challenge is the Rough Draft Project. Also preparing for Dance Daily December, while others worked on creating Create December, Vlogmas, Inkvent, and other wintery projects.

For my own November creative projects, I continued to work on weekly Letter-Writing, RAD Ballet Exam preparation for my students, working in my journals and writing with my new fountain pens in addition to regular article-writing, choreography, video filming and editing.

Twenty-Four 24s in 2024

In November, I read my 24th book of the year and I anticipate completing further “24s” in December as well, if not 100% completion then a good effort made. Gamification makes tracking statistics more fun, no doubt.

Inspired by Jess/JashiiCorrin on YouTube), this creative challenge is a playful way to track various leading metrics, projects and activities I wish to keep an eye on.

Having found such a structure useful this year and in 2023, for 2025 I may reduce the number of categories to 20, and raise the actions by one for a catchy “Twenty 25’s in 2025.”

Brochures from Museumsnacht Koeln in my Bullet Journal, a November highlight

Media Musings

My November in reading, listening, and viewing pleasures:

Art & Culture

Museumsnacht Koeln including exhibitions “Handle With Care,” “Not Afraid of Art,” and “Antifeminismus,” and finished off the night with a Spanish rapper.

Books & Reading

Books Read

Still reading along on my nonfiction picks (poetry, scripture, self-help), and I completed two novels in November:

  • Summer Romance by Annabel Monaghan was the 24th book I’ve completed this year and I loved it! Rom-Com so funny but also so tender and crushing, wonderful characters, family and friend relationships in addition to the romance. Not wanting to wear hard pants, being dumped by friends in the 7th grade (for me it was 6th), aging, working through grief…so relatable.
  • I finished my fall-y daily reading odyssey, A Toast to Autumn: A Collection of Cozy Fall And Halloween Poems, Poetry for Good Vibes During the Season by Alexis Jean and find that taken singly the poems are cute and there are a few gems, but I don’t recommend reading a poem each day in fall as I did, this was much too repetitive, the author being very committed to rhyme scheme and specific imagery. Still will probably recommend and return to certain goodies for the mood.
  • Purchased a new anthology to take me through 2025, 365 Poems for Life: An Uplifting Collection for Every Day of the Year compiled by Allie Esiri and was immediately touched and inspired!
Poetry Read

Poems about Sunflowers 🌻

Listening Highlights

Favorite things heard over the course of the month go here, such as concerts, songs, pieces of music, playlists, podcasts and more.

Music: Songs & Albums

It was time to update and enjoy my Harvest & Thanksgiving Songs Playlist on YouTube, including tracks such as:

  • Home” from Zero 7, an oldie but forever top fave
  • Hayley Sales shared “Present Enough for Me” and I’m pleased to see she’s releasing tracks as a sort of Advent Calendar this month
  • Muppets “Ode to Joy

Viewing Highlights

Films

Movies watched last month:

  • Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” Film (we watched “Beetlejuice” for Halloween) new Comedy/Horror
  • How it Ends” 2021 film is both apocalyptically dark and uplifting
Series

Series streamed in November:

Videos
Truly loved the blazing leaves against grey and rainy skies

Questions for Reflection

  • What do you want to remember from November, the past month, quarter, and year?
  • Which books, musical selections, and viewing do you currently recommend?
  • How are you planning for a creative and festive season?
  • What are your favorite late-fall-into-winter treats?
  • What is your vision for 2025?

Resources for Further Exploration

Let’s keep in touch, keep dancing, and never hesitate to let me know if I can be of service, would love to see you in my email newsletter or on social media!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
she/her or they/them
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach
helping multi-passionate creatives dance through their difficulties,
taking leaps of faith into fulfillment through coaching, yoga & dance education

Sourcing Ballet Somatically – Pedagogical Approaches to Integrating Movement Techniques

“The more the teacher can help students understand the structure and functioning of the human body, the more responsibly and effectively he or she can help them improve their performance and avoid injury.”

(Hamilton, T. 54)

This article was originally part of my MFA in Dance research methods work in 2012, and continues to be relevant to my teaching over a decade later. Though not currently such cutting-edge somatic or pedagogical techniques, the conversation continues about how to best educate dancers to honor the tradition of classical ballet while also supporting the whole dancer in a contemporary setting as artist, individual and person in society.

Blythe splits with upraised arms
Blythe makes a splitting floor shape with upraised arms in front of a pink wall

Abstract

This paper takes the approach of critical pedagogy to investigate practices in integrating somatics into teaching ballet technique. Critical pedagogy, as defined by Henry Giroux, is “the educational movement, guided by passion and principle, to help students develop consciousness of freedom, recognize authoritarian tendencies, and connect knowledge to power and the ability to take constructive action.”  (Giroux, 2010) 

Teachers too can approach pedagogy critically, with the aim of empowering students to think critically and make connections, applying knowledge to all areas of their lives.  I explore ways in which integrating somatic concepts into ballet technique training can be accomplished, including benefits and possible drawbacks, and appropriate applications of somatics in different settings (private studio, professional company, and university) so that teachers interested in combining the wisdom of ballet technique and somatic systems are aware of choices and resources available.  

Somatic approaches include, but are not limited to, Alexander Technique, Bartenieff Fundamentals/Laban Movement Analysis, Feldenkrais, Gyrokinesis/Gyrotonic, and Ideokinesis.  In current practice, it is more common to see modern dance classes use such concepts and exercises, whereas ballet practitioners may have to take separate classes and workshops and make their own connection between ballet technique and the body/mind connections fostered by somatic practice. However, some teachers such as Anna Paskevska and Cadence Whittier, well-known ballet professors and authors, acknowledge the value of such knowledge for ballet dancers, and propose connections between somatic practice, as education for the body, and ballet technique. I argue that an effective and versatile approach is to develop students’ facility with somatic concepts in the context of ballet instruction itself.   

Intro to the History of Somatics and Ballet Technique

Brief History of Ballet Education

A detailed discussion of ballet technique’s 300 year history is beyond the scope of this paper, but I would be remiss to omit altogether the development of ballet education, some innovations and influences on the technique, and major players in systematizing the form of classical movement.  In this paper, I look at ballet’s history with an emphasis on pedagogical approaches.  

Ballet was first a courtly dance form, and as such required no specialized training. 

Anna Paskevska, author of Both Sides of the Mirror, notes that “It is unlikely that the lords and ladies at the European courts prepared themselves for their balls and masques with arduous exercises, although they may have flexed their knees or even kicked their feet while waiting for their entrée.  But they probably did practice some of the steps they were to perform.” (47) 

As the classical  style of dance spread from France to Italy and Russia, it became codified and gained technical virtuosity .  Near the end of the seventeenth century, the first professional dancers came on the scene, combining the vocabulary of court dances with acrobatics. August Bournonville is credited with the first syllabus of dancing, which was expanded upon by Christian Johansson. 

Enrico Cecchetti, an Italian, is the most commonly known ballet technique theorist, and other schools of thought regarding technique include Vaganova (after Agrippina Vaganova, a Russian), the French school, and the Royal Academy of Dancing (Britain).  National schools of dance and ballet companies were formed, such as the Bolshoi in Russia, and professional ballet companies began touring the world, causing ballet to be widely practiced.  

Though the structure of the ballet class is the same everywhere, certain principles of instruction, tenets, progressions of steps and finer points of technique differ from school to school.  (Paskevska 1992) In the present day, a plethora of different styles of ballet classes are available, including some which strictly follow a traditional syllabus, some which combine aspects of different ballet traditions (French, Russian, etc.), and some which incorporate the teacher’s knowledge of other movement forms, such as other dance styles, yoga, Pilates, etc. 

My Perspective

Ballet dancers may or may not have detailed training in how the body works, and even if they do, it is largely left to them to connect this knowledge to their technique practice. As a teacher, I feel that my students benefit when basic movement principles (based on anatomical truths) are woven into technique instruction, setting students up for success wherever they may go, whether that be a professional career in dance or another field.  

As a student of Bartenieff Fundamentals during my MFA program, I felt such concepts filled critical gaps in my conception of human movement potential, and helped me identify disconnections in my technique.  

My own ballet training since the age of 5 has included some limited instruction regarding anatomy and using muscles properly (safely and efficiently) in movement, but the type and depth has varied widely, depending on the background experiences of my ballet technique teachers.  

Each instructor did their best based on their knowledge, and as a curious and ambitious student I sought out supplementary training such as Pilates and “body conditioning” as well. Though my ballet training was broad-based, including renowned teachers from around the country and concepts from yoga and Pilates, (and gyrotonic?) I didn’t receive formal education in anatomy, kinesiology, and movement fundamentals until graduate school.  I was a ballet major in high school, but at that level anatomy and somatic training weren’t offered.  

If I had chosen to major in dance as an undergraduate I would have hopefully been exposed to anatomy, kinesiology, movement patterning and/or somatics then, however if I had joined a company, I most likely would have to rely on my own initiative to receive supplementary training in techniques outside of classical ballet.  

I have found myself wishing that I had a more complete anatomy/kinesiology/movement patterning education sooner, possibly preventing injury and deepening my understanding of efficient movement during my formative years in dancing. 

The Current Situation: Choices Faced By Ballet Dancers and Teachers

“In this age of diversity and versatility, the need for a well-grounded technical base is extremely important.  Technique can be very simply defined as the ‘how to’ of any skill to be mastered.  It is an acquired ability that takes time and effort congruent with the complexity of the skill to be learned.” (Paskevska 2005 p. 105)

We have higher expectations of dancers than in the past, with ever increasing technical virtuosity and physical demands.  

“As the skill level within the professional ballet world continues to rise, ballet dancers are pushed to achieve impeccable technical skills—higher extensions, longer balances, more powerful ballon, and greater turnout—and as the desired aesthetic look of the dancer continues to change, these dancers are also driven to achieve the proper body proportions needed to succeed in the professional world,” (Whittier 2006) therefore it is necessary for dancers to educate themselves by various means to ensure that their bodies and minds are up to the challenge, and in an attempt to prolong their short careers in performance.  Ballet technique teachers too are taking it upon themselves to broaden the scope of their instruction to include concepts outside of traditional approaches.  

This rarified form of dance that we call ballet, considered by some to be “unnatural,” does benefit immensely from the dancer’s (and the teacher’s and choreographer’s) understanding of fundamental principles of movement, scientific findings and innovations in training.  How are today’s ballet teachers going about educating their students about the body and it’s most efficient use, as well as classical ballet technique?

Ballet teachers are challenged to help students produce correct execution in the first place, then apply principles learned in the basic combinations to ever-increasingly more complex challenges.  Sometimes we can remember learning a step from our own teachers, and how their descriptions and coaching worked for us.  If we can’t recall our own learning process, or seek other methods than our teachers employed, observing other classes and reading about other teachers’ approaches helps expand our scope of options. 

“Depending on curricular emphases, financial resources, personnel, and long range institutional goals, ballet has expanded creatively as well as functionally, shaped in part by new generations of teachers.  Many ballet teachers have studied and practiced other dance techniques, anatomy/kinesiology, composition, improvisation, Labananalysis, T’ai Chi, and body therapies such as Feldenkrais, Rolfing, and Alexander.  These experiences allow them a wider range of options to draw upon when teaching ballet technique.” (Penrod 1981 p.23)

With so many concepts and skills to impart to students, ballet teachers are challenged to keep students at the forefront of pedagogical consideration, focusing on the students’ needs and their short- and long-term goals in ballet.  Teachers must balance the students’ goals with their own short- and long-term goals for the students, asking what gaps exist in their technique, what themes are emerging, which pedagogical choices are and are not working.  

This paper presents only a few possibilities for enhancing the teaching of classical ballet, focusing on the appropriate applications of somatic techniques.

Literature Review

Current literature in somatics and ballet pedagogy includes books, journal articles, conference proceedings, and video recordings.  Most recent work is included in journals and magazines such as Dance Magazine and the Journal of Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance and in conference proceedings such as Global Perspectives on Dance Pedagogy.  

In my research, I spoke to ballet teachers here in Honolulu and in other parts of the United States, and read books on ballet technique, dance pedagogy, the role of dance in education, dance anatomy and kinesiology, and somatic techniques.  Many somatic approaches are available as resources to dancers, but there exists a gap between somatics and their application to ballet technique and ballet technique instruction.  

Published works that I discovered describes specific somatic practices and relates them to general physical well-being, injury recovery, and even modern dance, but only infrequently to ballet.  For example, a couple of newer resources co-authored by Rebecca Nettl-Fiol detail modern dancers’ use of a variety of somatic approaches, one of the text focusing specifically on Alexander Technique, with some inclusion of ballet as well.

The topic of somatics and ballet technique is important because ballet dancers, students and teachers of ballet technique can benefit from knowledge of these techniques, as it can enhance understanding and performance.   My point of view is that of a classically trained ballet dancer who also participates in modern dance and other techniques, and I seek to apply all of my knowledge and experience in the context of teaching ballet technique.

[Note to Amy: I still need to further summarize the literature, evaluate the literature, show relationships between studies, and show how the published work relates to my work]

Methodological and Theoretical Framework

This paper takes the approach of critical pedagogy to investigate practices in integrating somatics into teaching ballet technique.  Critical pedagogy, as defined by Henry Giroux, is “the educational movement, guided by passion and principle, to help students develop consciousness of freedom, recognize authoritarian tendencies, and connect knowledge to power and the ability to take constructive action.” (Giroux, 2010) 

Teachers too can approach pedagogy critically, with the aim of empowering students to think critically and freely, judging knowledge by its own merits and applying it in their lives as they see fit.  Somatics and ballet technique also form the theoretical framework.

The Role of Tradition in Teaching Ballet: Two Perspectives

There is some controversy in the field of classical ballet as to pedagogical approaches. Some professional ballet teachers advocate strictly following an established teaching method, while others encourage pedagogical innovation. Two strong voices within the literature have emerged in my research regarding the topic of tradition  versus innovation, those of John White and Anna Paskevska.  

John White: strict adherence to one method

John White warns against excessive experimentation and innovation-for-its-own-sake in ballet instruction.  Too much felicity undermines the system of learning to dance, developed over hundreds of years and with its own wisdom of progression, argues White.  White encourages choosing an approach (Vaganova or Cecchetti, for example) and studying it deeply, devoting a lifetime to it (p.12) rather than bouncing around picking and choosing whatever suits your fancy at the moment. Addressing teachers’ license in instructing ballet classes, White states that “Ballet teachers need to work within a proven syllabus of instruction principles.  However, a syllabus is only an outline of the material to be covered- what, how, when.  The teacher’s experience and judgment fill in the blanks with artistic nuances and colorations required to create the complete text.  This learning process helps students find their way up the steep climb to mastery of the technique and the art.” (White 2009 p. 12)  He goes on to further admonish, 

“In a futile attempt to elevate classical ballet instruction to accommodate modern concepts of art and public taste, we are beginning to see a multitude of ballet teaching theories that can best be described as the Mish-Mash method. M&M involves a little of this and a little of that. It is a stew that attempts to circumvent proven methodologies in order to speed up the process. It emphasizes technical tricks to make the product (dancers) more exciting and marketable.This innovative teaching approach is the product of uneducated teachers cherry-picking through established methods to formulate novel ‘best-of-the-best’ systems.  They borrow certain concepts of proven methodologies to form the basis of new or experimental ideas…” (White 2009 p.9)

Yet, even within proven classical systems, there is room for varied descriptive language and innovation- Vaganova herself was constantly revising and improving her system based on new learning. (Source!) 

Anna Paskevska: beyond tradition

In her third book, Ballet Beyond Tradition, (the first two were Ballet: an eight year course and Both Sides of the Mirror) Anna Paskevska states that 

“Many dancers draw on somatic and body/mind techniques in their training.  The term ‘somatics’ can be broadly defined as the body perceived from within, that is, a subjective apprehension of the effect of movement on one’s body…There are a plethora of somatic techniques that are available as resources for dancers—including yoga, Pilates, Alexander Technique, Bartenieff Fundamentals, Body Mind CenteringTM, Feldenkrais, and the work of Irene Dowd and Eric Noel Franklin in Ideokinetics.” (Paskevska 2005 p. 4)

However, Paskevska chooses to focus on the concepts underpinning Limon (modern) technique in the book, because they “are the most applicable to my purpose because they deal with quality of motion as contrasted with neuromuscular repatterning, which concentrates on alignment, freedom of the joints, and flexibility…the emphasis of this work is on quality and nuance, and presupposes a thorough knowledge of ballet technique.” (Paskevska 2005 p.4)  Paskevska asserts that “When ballet is taught with due consideration for the physical, cognitive, and intellectual development of children, the technique provides the vehicle to learn physical control through the acquisition of vocabulary.” (Paskevska 2005 p. 105)  Physical control is a hallmark of ballet technique.  Just as ballet technique training can provide physical control that can then be applied to other physical pursuits, other training forms that develop physical control, such as somatics, can support mastery of ballet technique.

Paskevska also alludes to developing analytical capabilities with regard to ballet:

“Learning to dance is not the same as learning steps.  Steps are used initially to instill patterns of movement and later test the proficiency of the neuronal connections through the evidence of the exactness with which they are performed.  Through practice, in addition to the acquisition of a broadened vocabulary, several attributes that may be present in a nascent form are developed: a keen spatial awareness, response to rhythmic patterns, and an ability to see and therefore reproduce movement accurately. With practice and proficiency also comes the ability to distinguish the subtleties in movement, hear the rhythmic patterns more precisely, and perceive one’s position in space in more nuanced ways, leading to analysis and judgment about the quality of one’s response.” (Paskevska 2005 p. 107)

Somatic Concepts in Ballet Technique

My opinion, plus others’ advocacy within dance, opinions of other kinesiology professionals, etc. (ergonomics, anatomy/physiology texts…) 

  • Potential and demonstrated benefits: what is the cost to the dancer who never has this type of instruction?
  • Injury prevention- through attention to muscular patterning, and correcting inefficient movement habitsGreater expressive potential- through awareness of intent, transitions, quality of movement, knowledge of movement choices
  • Versatility- transferability to other dance styles, larger movement vocabulary for composition, greater professional hireability
  • Understand logic of ballet technique- make full use of concepts in dancing and in teaching

Types of Somatic Concepts Available

There are many somatic approaches available for use by ballet teachers, including Alexander Technique, Authentic Movement, Bartenieff Fundamentals, Bodywork, Continuum, Eutony, Feldenkrais Method, Gyrotonic Expansion System/Gyrokinesis, Ideokinesis, Laban Movement Analysis, Phenomenology, Pilates, Postural Integration (PI), Progressive Relaxation, Qigong, Rolfing (Structural Integration), Rosen Method Bodywork, Skinner Releasing Technique, Strozzi Somatics, Trager Approach, and Yoga.  In this section, I define and briefly discuss the methods which I have observed and have a history of application to ballet technique instruction.

Alexander Technique

Popular for postural correction, undoing muscular patterns which lead to tension and injury, especially with musicians, dancers.

Rebecca Nettl-Fiol, Luc Vanier (Wozny 2012): “[Vanier] sees ballet as a conversation between two spirals that, when activated, create a sense of ease. ‘There is so much in ballet that is based on the spiral, or epaulement, which creates and oppositional tension that is freeing.’”  “Corrections take a different form as well. ‘Instead of doing something else, it’s more about stopping something, rather than adding something.’”  “The Alexander Technique can bring a student back in contact with their capacity to reason out what is going on.  Sometimes, all you need to do is allow a dancer to ask themselves ‘What is going on?’ for them to wait for results (inhibit) and be curious (direct) in the activity, for the problem to go away by itself.”

Bartenieff Fundamentals & Laban Movement Analysis

Irmgard Bartenieff, a physical therapist and student of Laban, developed a set of basic principles which she considered to be fundamental to all human movement.  Rudolf Laban developed systems of movement analysis and notation, which became influential worldwide, and are particularly popular in modern dance and higher education.

I will refer to the article “Laban Movement Analysis Approach to Classical Ballet Pedagogy” by Cadence Whittier (2006)

Peggy Hackney’s video, “Discovering Your Expressive Body,” along with her book, “Making Connections,” elucidates how to apply Fundamentals to dance technique.  Hackney asserts that “Through systematically exploring our articulate body, we gain an understanding of fundamental movement principles that can help to mobilize and integrate our articulations at the body level and in so doing, we develop more clarity in our artistic expression.”  The principles of total body connectedness are: breathing and hollowing support, leg lengthening without locking, alive verticality through the central axis of our bodies, internal support by hanging from the femoral joint, vertical support while rolling down the spine and hanging, standing and releve, lower body mobility, upper body mobility, diagonal connections lower to upper, movement with three spatial pulls, weight shift and propulsion, and body-half action.

Fundamentals is my primary area of interest in terms of somatic approaches applicable to ballet, but this paper has turned out to be more about the variety of options and generally how to present them, rather than specifically how to integrate ballet and Bartenieff Fundamentals.  That would be a nice follow-up paper perhaps. 

Feldenkrais

Dance teachers who apply Feldenkrais principles in their technique classes include Tessa Chandler, Barbara Forbes, and Peff Modelski (Wozny 2012).  “Moshe Feldenkrais created many powerful lessons dealing with how our eyes govern our movement.” “Chandler also applies Feldenkrais’ concept of the elasticity of moving back and for the between micro and whole-body movements…Feldenkrais’ walking lessons also influence Chandler’s approach to using the feet.” “Novelty, as in non-habitual movement, is central to the work.” “It’s the Feldenkrais motto of ‘learning through inquiry’ that distinguishes her use of the method in her classes…” Movement as skeletal action

Gyrokinesis/Gyrotonic

Developed by Juliu Horvath, who began as a swimmer and gymnast before becoming a ballet dancer with the Romanian State Opera Ballet.  

Idiokinesis

An approach to the improvement of human posture and body movement, in which visual and tactile-kinesthetic imagery guide the student toward healthier form.  Employs the use of images as a means of improving muscle patterns.  Visualizing the movement only with the mind’s eye (either as movement within the body or in space), without any perceivable sensation of muscular effort, primes neural pathways and reprograms unnecessary and unwanted muscular tensions. Sweigard, for example, evolved “nine lines of movement” that could be visualized in “constructive rest” to create better mechanical balance in upright standing posture. (Source!)

Pilates

Pilates may be the best-known somatic technique for ballet dancers, as it enjoys widespread use as a supplementary physical training regimen, with ballet schools and companies also offering classes. Joseph Pilates, who was born in Germany in 1880 and later moved to New York City, developed a system of exercises with equipment or on a mat, designed to “eliminate all physical limitations.” (Ungaro, p.8)  

Pilates’ system is a great benefit to dancers, particularly ballet dancers, developing strong and flexible musculature, and is built on both Eastern and Western traditions (he created the system with concepts such as breath control, mental focus, and athletic training).  In her book, Pilates: Body in motion, Alycea Ungaro defines the practice: 

“Pilates is exercise.  

It is a physical training regimen based on the body in its most natural state – in motion. Pilates is an art form, similar to martial arts or dance, in that it must be worked to perfection on a daily basis.  Pilates is a physical science.  It is a technique so precise and concentrated that its results remain with you forever.”

The book The Body Eclectic includes interviews with professional dancers on their use of somatic techniques, in it dancers report that Pilates is “one of the best at strengthening,” (p.98) “it’s a form of conditioning; it doesn’t do anything for quality. However, it might allow dancers to extend their qualitative range of movement as they extend control,” (p.197) and they use it for such purposes as recovery (from injury), pelvic alignment, affect on use of external rotators, hamstrings. One dancer reflects that “In retrospect, I must admit now that my frequent battles with injuries in my dancing/choreographing career have been a blessing in disguise. It has led me to seek alternative techniques and modalities that have so deepened my body’s awareness of itself,” (p. 206) “I had a plyca and cartilage that had to be removed because I was injured at a young age, which was good in a way because it led me to study somatics.  At that time it was Pilates, later on other things.”

Applications of Somatics in Ballet Pedagogy

It is important to consider the impact of the context of the teaching situation on pedagogical delivery of conceptual material, including somatics.  Ballet teachers must consider what function ballet technique has for the student, and what developmental levels are being taught.

Look at training methods of elite companies, as well as other realms. In the broader educational sector, K-12 and university levels are “buying-into” these concepts, also modern dance frequently implements them.  One factor in deciding how to deliver ballet technique content in class is the age and developmental stage of students.  Anna Paskevska points out that analysis not useful in dance education until after 14 years old (cites Piaget), and asserts the value of dance class as mimicking before that age.  

K-12 Education

General education and younger ages, students who likely have several hobbies, sports, possibly in context of school day, more likely after-school program.  Students may emerge from ballet training (when it is available) in K-12 schools to pursue further training on the path to professional dancing, or they may use the physical and mental skills developed towards other movement forms and other subjects in higher education and in life.

Private Dance Studios

Private studios serve young dancers, aspiring pre-professionals, as well as recreational dancers of all ages.  The emphasis of each studio is a bit different- some focus on competitions and performing in a variety of styles, others strictly on ballet training with the goal of producing professional dancers.  Many of the aims and outcomes of dancing at a private studio are the same as in K-12 education, but there may be more of an emphasis on professional preparation, competition, and performance.

Dance Conservatories

Conservatory training is a stepping-stone to work as a professional dancer, tends to be younger students for ballet training, since they can enter a company at 18.  My high school alma mater, North Carolina School of the Arts, fits this description, as do other well-known schools such as the School of American Ballet (SAB- New York City Ballet’s school), the Julliard School, and many others.  These settings explicitly cultivate professional dancers, and some are highly competitive and rigorous in their training.

Ballet Companies

Treating and preventing injuries, maintaining technique, developing strength, warming and preparing for rehearsal and performance.  Professional dancers often have to take the initiative (and make the financial investment in adjunct techniques to supplement their practice, but sometimes ballet companies will provide their dancers with somatic training. (Source!)

Higher Education

Non-conservatory institutions of higher education, such as teaching and research universities and colleges with dance departments, train modern dancers, some ballet dancers, and actors, as well as future teachers, choreographers, administrators, critics, dance researchers.  In his article “Ballet in Higher Education,” James Penrod tells of how ballet is taught at the university level, often to modern dancers as an adjunct technique and compositional/choreographic tool, as well as to actors and athletes:

“…to make ballet technique more meaningful to students, some teachers are using a different descriptive terminology and approach to teaching technique.  Using concepts from Labananalysis or Alexander, for example, students are encouraged to experience the movements as an internal rather than goal oriented process to learn postures, positions, and steps that are unified as an expressive whole. (Penrod 1981 p.23)

“It is a tribute to the vitality of the form and to the malleability of its principles that ballet can enhance individual growth and body awareness and can create a discipline and concentration which complement the freedom of some other movement forms.” (Penrod 1981)

Applications and Approaches for Ballet and Somatics

This section will discuss existing ways ballet incorporates somatic concepts and techniques, with regard to teaching approaches and converging disciplines, and their relative merits according to me and others.

Injury Screening/Prevention

Articles about this include “A Somatic Screening Procedure Using Bartenieff Fundamentals” by Sandra Kay Lauffenburger, in Preventing Dance Injuries.  Lauffenburger proposes that dance teachers receive training in Bartenieff Fundamentals (or enlist the help of someone who is trained) in order to thoroughly screen students for muscular patterning disconnections that combined with the type of strenuous exertion that ballet requires, could lead to injury.

Separate/Supplementary Technique

Historically, somatic techniques have mostly been used by dancers and teachers as a supplementary technique, and taking separate classes on somatics is probably the most prevalent way dancers become of aware of such approaches.  Ballet dancers may be referred to a teacher of Alexander Technique, for example, for physical therapy after injury or to maintain their professional edge.  Dancers apply their somatic education, strength, and balance to their dancing, but are left to make the connections and continue to practice the somatic approaches themselves.

Descriptive Tool/Imagery

Another very common approach, based on my experience and research, where teachers use a variety of descriptions of technique concepts (or choreographers in rehearsal) in order to connect with all of the students in a class and provide further insight.  

“Movement is often thought of in imagistic and metaphorical ways during a technique class—the legs reach beyond the ground like the roots of a tree… This creates a more dynamic interaction between their bodies and the movement pathways that their bodies create in the space.” (Whittier 2006 p.126)

Concepts and Exercises in Context of Ballet Technique Class

Whittier also discusses other ways to implement Laban/Bartenieff concepts in ballet class, such as Dynamic and rhythmical sounding, Reflective responses to movement, Movement experimentation, Creation of movement exercises, and further applications of LMA Shape Theory and Shape Flow Support. 

An emerging trend, particularly in higher education, where teachers aim to balance exploratory concepts with sound technique training.

Opposition & Potential Drawbacks

I have made the case for the value of including somatic concepts and practices in ballet, but John White is not the only dissenting voice to integrating somatic education into ballet instruction.  When ballet teachers consider adding exercises, explanations, and explorations to an already full lesson plan, an important consideration is what might be the cost. 

One concern when you bring something new in, is that something must go to make room for it- what might be lost?  Ballet teachers have to exercise caution and not focus simply on their own favorite areas of technique, pet steps and visualizations.  However, I think it can be a false dichotomy to set the goals…

In designing lessons and a course of study, ballet teachers are informed by students’ ultimate goals of learning ballet technique.  Precision of execution, body safety, expressive artistry…

Conclusion

Many in the field of ballet believe that educating the dancer in not only the traditional approach to technique, but also the somatic underpinnings and fundamental movement principles governing all human movement, will improve technique, prevent injury, and enhance expressiveness. However, even if the student is in higher education and has exposure to these concepts, it is left to them to transfer the ideas discipline-to-discipline (kinesiology to ballet, Bartenieff Fundamentals to ballet, etc).  

Ballet teachers have many considerations to make with regard to the most effective approach to ballet technique instruction, and one possibility is to implement somatic approaches that facilitate efficient movement. I propose that an effective and versatile approach might be to develop students’ facility with somatic concepts in the context of ballet instruction itself.   

There are various ways to integrate somatic knowledge with ballet technique which I have explored here, each suitable to different audiences and purposes. Each teacher ultimately decides how best to present their content, and each dancer is also responsible for obtaining the fullest technical and artistic education possible. Both technical and artistic ends are served by awareness of what options are available, and what somatic approaches and delivery styles work best for different audiences and purposes.

Works Cited 

  1. Bales, M. and R. Nettl-Fiol, eds. 2008. The body eclectic: Evolving practices in dance training.  Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
  2. Bartenieff, I. with D. Lewis. 1980. Body movement: Coping with the environment. New York : Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.
  3. Giroux, H. 2010. Lessons from Paolo Freire. Chronicle of Higher Education. 
  4. Hackney, P. 1989. VHS. Discovering your expressive body: Basic concepts in dance training utilizing Bartenieff fundamentals with Peggy Hackney.  Pennington, NJ: Dance Horizons.
  5. Hackney, P. 2002. Making connections: Total body integration through Bartenieff Fundamentals. New York: Routledge.
  6. Hankin, T. 1986. The Technique Class: How can we help students to dance?  The Journal of Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.  
  7. Johnson, L. A contemporary approach to ballet training for university dance majors. Global perspectives on dance pedagogy: Research and Practice. 
  8. Lauffenburger, S.K. 2005. A somatic screening procedure using Bartenieff Fundamentals. Preventing dance injuries, edited by R. Solomon, J. Solomon and S. Cerny Minton.  Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 29-36.
  9. Paskevska, A. 2004. Ballet beyond tradition. NY: Routledge.
  10. Penrod, J. 1981. Ballet in higher education.  From Journal of Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.  
  11. Ungaro, A. 2002. Pilates: Body in motion. New York: DK Publishing.
  12. Whittier, C. 2006. Laban movement analysis approach to classical ballet pedagogy. Journal of Dance Education, v6 n4: 124-132.
  13. Wozny, N. 2012. The Somatics infusion. Dance Magazine. (Issue? May 2012)

Dance Daily December & into the New Year – 31 Days of Movement to Change Your Life

Recent studies in Neuroscience indicate that dancing is one of the very best things you can do for your brain, and that’s just one compelling reason to get your groove on. Here Dr. Nas explains some of dancing’s benefits on Instagram.

Side Stretch in the dance studio
Blythe doing a seated side stretch at Tanzraum: dancey stretching counts!

We Need Dance!

Right now we need to feel good and move for change more than ever, therefore I’m taking on a personal challenge to dance every day in December and inviting you to join in, too!

We will move mindfully and joyfully through the winter holidays and into 2025. Or you can take the challenge and repeat as desired at any time of year.

Dance Daily December Invitation Video on YouTube

YOU Are Invited

Whether you’ve got one minute or all day, there’s a way for you to participate and benefit.

Such a daily creative dance practice is accessible to all abilities and experience levels and achievable in minutes a day. Be amazed at the far-reaching impacts such a practice can have in your life.

8+ Ideas for Daily Dancing

Here are some of the ways I may dance each day in December. What might you try and what did I miss?

1. Give a Class, Take a Class

Three days a week I regularly teach class, and maybe you also have a class or two you could attend to kick off your daily dancing habit.

Return to that class you started, a favorite technique, or sample a new style. You could also join my live Mindful Movement Classes in-studio and online.

2. Dance Along with a Video

Less commitment- and time-intensive and good for days when no class is available or you don’t have time for an hour-long session, check out free offerings on YouTube or TikTok.

One resource is my library of playlists at the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel, where I will also be sharing clips & compilations from my daily dancing practice in December. For example, the Creative Ballet Port de Bras – Arm Artistry Exploring Nature Article and YouTube Playlist contain a bunch of upper-body dance ideas.

3. Groove to Music

This strategy requires even less time and effort. Simply Move to the Music: pick a song or piece of music, old or new, that makes you boogie! Or sway, waltz or sashay.

Lots of space would be great, but the kitchen or car is fine too, using just a body part or two (head & shoulders, just arms…) or the whole instrument.

4. Egg Like Twyla Tharp

This practice can be done with or without music and in any available space. I demonstrated a version of this exercise in my Ignite the Spark of Creativity 5-Day Challenge, which Tharp describes thus:
“The exercise I call Egg is a great way to start a creative session. It couldn’t be simpler: I sit on the floor, bring my knees to my chest, curl my head down to my knees, and try to make myself as small as I can. In this minimalized shrunken state, I have nowhere else to go; I cannot become smaller, I can only expand and grow. And so it becomes a ritual of discovery for me. If I lift my head and straighten my back I become Tall Egg. If I stretch out my legs and point my toes, forming an L-shape, I become Jackknife Egg. I stick with it as long as it remains interesting, sometimes going through as many as a hundred positions. I’ve been doing this daily for years and I usually find something new in the process.” (The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life p.112)

One can take on this improvisation every day and come up with something new every time!

5. Dance in a New Place

Observe how you move in a different location with a Site-Specific Exploration. Use whatever space you have or seek one out that you have access to. Small or large works, video is a space too. Notice how my move in this environment, respond to what you see and sense.

6. Make Character Moves

Wear a Costume/Embody a Character through dress. Try different clothing, accessories, or props. Could be a cape, a skirt, shirt, hat, shoes, or a whole outfit or costume.

Take on a disguise, be a different version of yourself or someone else entirely. Imagine how the person inhabiting such an ensemble would move and then go with their flow.

7. Come to Your Senses

Try some Eyes-Closed Somatic Sensing by carefully and slowly notice your movements with your eyes closed or softly focused. Notice how shapes and shaping, movements and relationship to your surroundings change without a visual representation.

Or tune into or out of other senses: how is it to move in response to the texture of a surface, the smell of a scent, the temperature or movement of the air and wind, the taste of a flavor?

8. Do a Different Prompt Daily

Use the same impulse or prompt each day or try a different one every time.

Create December is a creative challenge hosted by Heather Mattern and Documented Journey meant for a variety of media, Inktober is a daily drawing challenge that takes place in October for both of which there are heaps of daily prompts available for this and past years’ events. These can be used to stimulate creative dance improvisation, studies, and choreographies as well!

Keep Dancing Through Life

I hope you will join me for Dance Daily December and witness the transformation that a daily mindful movement and creative dance practice can cause in your life!

Can’t wait to discover what I and other movers discover during the month, and will be posting clips from my explorations on social media (Instagram, possibly TikTok, where I shared my Alphabet Superset Micro Choreo Videos) and YouTube.

Here is the video compilation of the 5-Day Get Down Daily Challenge on YouTube

Resources for Further Exploration

Questions for Reflection

  • What is your favorite dance style or technique?
  • Which type of dance or movement haven’t you tried yet that you’d like to sample?
  • What creative practices do most enjoy?
  • How could a mindful movement or creative dance enhance your life?
  • What do you dream of creating?

Let’s keep in touch, keep dancing, and never hesitate to let me know if I can be of service!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
they/them or she/her
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach

helping multi-passionate creatives

dance through difficulty

DISCLAIMER: A Blythe Coach recommends that you consult your physician regarding the applicability of any recommendations and follow all safety instructions before beginning any exercise program. When participating in any exercise or exercise program, there is the possibility of physical injury. If you engage in this exercise or exercise program, you agree that you do so at your own risk, are voluntarily participating in these activities, assume all risk of injury to yourself.

Dealing with Difficult Developments – 15 Ways to Cope with Challenges & Setbacks

Many I know experience the recent Primary Election results in the United States as very bad news.

It feels like the world is on fire and I’m so afraid of the sinister agenda of those rising to power and the predictably terrible impacts for American people I know, myself included. The outlook under such an administration is not good for teachers or education, culture, the arts, humanities, even science and healthcare. Our expression of personhood, the safety and rights of LGBTQIA2S+, AFABs, especially people of color, immigrants, trans people are all in danger. Alarmingly, democracy itself seems threatened.

People have thoughtfully been asking how I (as American abroad, as teacher, as friend) feel about it all, both here in Germany and my dears in the US and elsewhere. Not doing so well, to be honest!

It is taking me a bit of time to process and grieve a bit before I can start to articulate an answer to that. Just trying to cope, and will use all the tools at my disposal to recover and then constructively respond.

That said, I will not allow political events or other challenges to permanently derail my work, my mission and vision, but am committed to transmuting it to fuel my creativity and connection.

Dealing with Difficult Developments Bullet Journal brainstorm spread

Bad News Bears

Maybe it’s some other hard news or tricky times you’re navigating instead or in addition to the global political drama. Unwanted diagnoses or unexpected professional or personal changes happen. I am no strangers to these strange twists of fate.

Unfortunately at such overwhelming moments, we can tend to forget how to get through them. It may be that the only way out is through, as with all types of grief, but there are still tools available to us, wherever we are in the struggle. When we’re in it, it may not be easy to see how this particular unexpected or unwanted change may lead to growth, insights, and benefits beyond our current context.

Hard times come to us all, so how can we bounce back and recover? Here are the tools that work for me when I need to cope with difficult developments and which I share with clients and students to support their commitment to what’s important in their lives despite setbacks.

Leaning on them now and curious to hear what you find works best for you!

1. Take a Time Out

Find a safe place to process the news. Cry, vent, grieve the future you pictured and your attachment to the results you wanted.

Sometimes we have to put aside time for this and otherwise function at work, school, and other commitments. This is difficult, but take whatever time you can, be as generous with yourself as you can be since the more space you have to properly process and recover by various means, the easier it will be to come out on the other side of the funk.

Repeat as necessary.

2. Audit Inputs

Taking time and space to renew yourself includes being selective about news outlets, social media, reading, listening, and viewing. Consider limiting screen time, and creating other healthy boundaries as needed.

I have found un-following sources that consistently make me feel bad and purposely consuming more empowering and inspiring content has a positive effect on my mental health. Stop subscribing to disempowering or otherwise negative sources, at least for a while.

This is not one-and-done, but rather needs to happen periodically, much as other physical and digital decluttering does.

In the past, I’ve ditched accounts that promote diet culture, unhealthy beauty standards, heteronormativity, transphobia, and gender-essentialism and also anything that just makes me feel bad, even if I’m not sure why.

Instead, I hand-pick which social media sources are in my feeds wherever possible and then limit how often I’m there and how much time I spend. Some accounts I’ve found wonderfully supportive recently:

3. Process & Express

Depending on your personal needs, processing difficult news will look differently. Going through the thoughts and feelings that arise may be done best alone, just crying it out, writing in a notebook or otherwise releasing thoughts and feelings, or with a trusted friend, family member, or professional.

In Reflective Practice Through Journaling, I wrote about Therapeutic and other kinds of personal writing that professionals recommend and that I find valuable in my own practice.

A therapist, counselor, or coach may be helpful. As a trained life coach with InsideTrack (Master Certified Coach) and Accomplishment Coaching (Certified Graduate) with years of experience as a one-to-one coach I consider myself a catalyst in every setting, with my goal to bring forth brilliance in the community and witness human potential unfold. If you’d like to explore working with me in this capacity, schedule a consultation and to discuss my 3-month Signature Coaching Program and ontological coaching services.

In any case, find a way to let out your feelings & thoughts and find a constructive way forward.

Blythe with red and orange fall leaves wet from the rain

4. Tune in to Your Senses

Aromas & oils, rosewater, beloved scents. Favorite baked goods, experiences, places, landscapes, or views may all help you be present and feel a bit better.

5. Find Comfort

Self-Care exquisitely as you can and also lean into resources such as caring people and pets. Creature comforts like baths, blankets, flannel sheets and pajamas, soothing the senses in your favorite ways can help us feel safe and secure in order to recover.

Taking care of these needs seems so basic, but when we’re confronted with strong emotion and hard times, we can tend to forget what can help us feel better or at least supported as we ride the waves of life.

A spa day would be amazing, but any little bit of care and pampering can make a difference in our sense of well-being.

Writing with cappuccino (with a heart in the foam!) in flannel sheets in bed

6. Nourish

Nourishment, snacks, treats, and hot or appropriate-temperature favorite beverages also fall into this category. Plenty of nutrients, hydration, and satiation.

It might not solve all of our problems to eat, but being hungry does not help us to feel secure and comfort meals or dishes can be a way to care for self and others. If you notice an unhealthy relationship to food and eating, this is something to look into with a professional’s help.

In the below video I’m indulging in several comforting activities: eating my favorite fresh-baked pumpkin muffins, drinking a delicious cappuccino, and playing with fountain pens and ink, a new hobby. I’ve got a candle, some crystals and essential oils nearby.

New Inks, Old Pens, Muffins, Coffee & a cat creatively coping YouTube video

7. Get Outside

Fresh air, sunlight, new views, movement, getting outdoors even briefly can create a big shift and even breakthroughs. Get into nature, see new perspectives walking or observing closely.

Sketching, photography, birdwatching, plant & animal identification, botany, hiking or mountain biking, looking at the water or sailing on it, there are so many ways to benefit.

Laacher See / Lake with autumn colors

8. Mindful Movement

Dance is my number one, and research supports it’s advantages! Maybe your groove is also moving to the music, but Yoga, Qigong, Tai Chi and other Martial Arts or Sports might be your thing. Pranayama, Breathwork, and Meditation also have powerful positive effects.

You don’t have to be “good” at any of these activities in order to experience the benefits engaging in them. Jolynne Anderson, my life coach since my coach training program with Accomplishment Coaching, is a joyful mover herself, one of the topics of this insightful article and podcast.

Perhaps you might find something of interest on the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel where since 2020 I’ve been sharing Ballet, Dance, & Yoga Videos and Playlists with warmups, exercises, tutorials, and diverse tools and techniques for creative people.

Wonderful Warmers, one of a library of playlists on the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel

It would also be a pleasure to have you in my live Mindful Movement Classes In-Studio & Online (Ballet, Barre a Terre, Dance, Yoga…) to move together at home or anywhere in the world!

9. Mood Music

Along the lines of engaging all the senses and potentially moving the body, music that embraces or alters the mood can make a big difference. Listening to particular songs, albums, or pieces of music will bring powerful associations.

Wallow in the feels with musical selections to match and really get it all out. Change the tone with something uplifting. Search out or create a playlist that moves you like you want it to.

In addition to my library of Dance and Mindful Movement playlists and videos on YouTube, I also have a wide variety of seasonal and themed music playlists which I share publicly there. For example, a couple of current favorites are Harvest & Thanksgiving Songs and Music for Creativity & Productivity.

10. Connect with Community

Online, in-person, by mail; blood or chosen family, professional networking, interest groups, friends, fandoms. It doesn’t have to be many, but which folks are quality, who are your true blue crew?

Connect with them, let yourself be loved-up and supported and love up others in return. Maybe they are people, and maybe they are pets and other creatures around us.

It would be my pleasure to connect with you online via social media and/or my approximately-weekly Email Newsletter, itself a feast of dancey and creative living resources, featuring my latest creations and those of other awesome folks.

Rufio the cat on a pouf

11. Hobby it Up

Pursue personal interests, nerd out. Pick something new to try, a class, a craft, an instrument…or return to favorite pastimes you know tickle your fancy. Pursue a passion regardless of talent or personal profit, for the pure joy of it.

My latest pursuit is fountain pens and inks and it is proving both creative and diverting! Wrote about my love affair with this type of analog expression in Pen Friends – Inky Adventures in Writing and have posted a couple of chatty pen and ink videos to continue my EDC and creative supplies series.

Hot Mess Post-Election Pen & Ink Play video on YouTube

12. Read a Book

For me, ideally fiction such as a cozy mystery or Rom-Com, and also poetry. Whatever genre works for you, let yourself be transported, shift perspectives, learn and imagine.

13. Create Art

Explore different media, draw, paint, collage, do ceramics. Get a body high with ecstatic dance, explore dance improvisation & choreography as a solo mover or join a group. Try a new technique, art class, or just doodle.

Creative writing, poems, stories, essays, novels, journaling. You get the idea, express yourself privately and publicly, as an amateur or professional.

Put yourself in the path of beauty and observe others’ works in galleries, museums, performances, collaborate, generate the world of your imagination.

Creative Challenges

Here are a few past creative coaching challenges that I have shared, with future opportunities like Dance Daily December to be announced:

Get Down Daily was one of my most fun challenges yet, and is ongoing!

14. Revel in Seasons & Holidays

Right now it’s fall and the convergence of the darkness of Daylight Savings time and anxiety about global politics and the well being of my loved ones have converged to create seasonal blues.

Thus, I’m taking my vitamin D and have thrown myself into full Fall-into-Winter mode. That means decorating my journal and house, listening to appropriate music, contemplating what to make and bake next and spending all of my free time covered in flannel and sipping hot cocoa.

My Thanksgiving and Christmas/Winter decorations, cards, stamps, ephemera…it’s all coming out bit by bit and I’ve gone ahead and started listening to this writing in a cozy Christmas cabin video/sound scene for writing and productive times.

15. Contribute Service

Activism, volunteering, charity. No matter how needy we are ourselves, there is likely someone in our community who could benefit from our time, energy, or spare change when we have the bandwidth again.

Soup kitchens and animal shelters are a great place to start, or perhaps there is an organization or cause that is dear to your heart. When we have the resources to give in whatever way we can, it does wonders to give to something larger than ourselves.

Resources for Further Exploration

Questions for Reflection

  • What challenges are you currently facing?
  • Which voices and sources are you listening to and how do they make you feel?
  • What sounds, scents, tastes, sights, and other sensations help you to ground and be present?
  • Which resources do you need to connect with to take the next step?
  • What kind of dance (or art, or work) will you create from this?

Let’s keep in touch, keep dancing, and never hesitate to let me know if I can be of service!

More dance, yoga, and coaching content coming at you again soon, would love to see you in my email newsletter or on social media until then!

Blythe Stephens, MFA, Bliss Catalyst
they/them or she/her
Creator of A Blythe Coach: dance through your difficulties
and take leaps of faith into a joyful, fulfilling life

DISCLAIMER: A Blythe Coach recommends that you consult your physician regarding the applicability of any recommendations and follow all safety instructions before beginning any exercise program. When participating in any exercise or exercise program, there is the possibility of physical injury. If you engage in this exercise or exercise program, you agree that you do so at your own risk, are voluntarily participating in these activities, assume all risk of injury to yourself.

Boo October is Through – 2024 Month 10 Review

October was an extra-long, very action-packed, fun, and also anxious for various reasons. I managed to vote in the US Primary Election and was worried about the outcome, as well as my Mom’s upcoming knee surgery and various other concerns personal and professional.

A short visit with family members I haven’t seen in ages was lovely. Our weekend escape to Mendig with friends was a refreshing adventure. My new fountain pen hobby provided creative diversion.

A volcanic eruption 11,000 years ago created this crater lake, Laacher See

October provided peak activity & foliage

In teaching, the month was very productive, focusing on well-being, self-care, Ballet technique basics & exam preparation for my students. Amidst an eventful month, I continued to create and publish work.

Gorgeous changing and falling leaves swirled around the whole month here in Cologne and the surrounding area, through sun and fog and political drama.

October BuJo Review Video on YouTube

Bullet Journaling & Planning

October brought cats, pumpkins, bats, and Halloween to my Bullet Journal, and I shared my initial setup on Instagram here. I continued to update my Monthly, Weekly, and Daily logs and Annual Collections. Since the last week transitioned from October to November and I was “behind” due to getting sick, I waited until early November to set up that month’s pages.

The above YouTube Video is a flip-through of the month in my Seasonal Book including goals, glows, media favorites, and events.

I also created a Spooky October Correspondence spread, updated my Twenty-Four 24’s spreads, and re-established a previous practice, about which I wrote in my email newsletter:

“Back in my training with Accomplishment Coaching in Seattle, we were encouraged in months with 5 weeks (or where most of the days in the week fall into that month, about quarterly), to take time off on the 5th week. This provides a natural pause from weekly activities and results in still consistently meeting or producing work an average of 4 times per month as well as time to reflect and recover outside of observed holidays.

Since I’ve been serving more in academic and studio settings and creating online, I’ve let this healthy practice fall by the wayside, but I want to revive it now and into 2025. Depending on class scheduling and students needs, I will continue to offer classes mostly every week, but will take a break from publishing my (otherwise weekly) email newsletter on those weeks and may also skip a blog article or video if I see fit.”

In fact, it was a well-timed pause from publishing. Just need to schedule it into my calendar for next January, April, July, and October. There aren’t any other holidays that should affect my teaching schedule until the winter break.

October highlights page in Bullet Journal
October Glows and Media highlights in my Bullet Journal

Teaching & Coaching

Regular Mindful Movement classes in Balletlicious Ballet Barre+ and Yummy Gentle Yoga continued throughout, and studio classes in Ballet and Barre a Terre continued, School Elective courses had a two-week Fall Break and then everything returned to full fall swing.

The Daylight Savings Time change happened in Germany on October 27th and that always throws me for a bit of a loop, but everyone managed to make it to class on time and I’m adjusting to the dark time of year.

There are a couple of coaching slots available this season and I will keep you posted on further offerings as they come together!

Fall yoga scene with Halloween candle, cocoa, leaves, foam roller, ball

Writing & Publishing Articles

In October I published five articles to the blog:

Filming & Sharing Videos

My YouTube Channel and Blog have been where I’ve seen the most growth in visibility and with your help I may be able to reach 1,000 subscribers to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel before the end of 2024!

I published four videos to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel in October:

September & Q3 BuJo Review – Month 9 2024 Creative Journal video on YouTube
Dance Shoe Blues & FAQs Video on YouTube
Pen Friends Video on YouTube
Simple Standing Supported Stretch Video on YouTube

Connecting: Email & Social Media

The best way to keep up-to-date on everything I’m coaching, teaching, creating and sharing about as well as my favorite work from other creators is to subscribe to my weekly email newsletter.

I sent four weekly Email Newsletters in October, full of value-packed resources for fellow creatives, and posted six times to Instagram. It is my honor to be connected to you there, here, on social media, online and in-person!

Creative Challenges

For October creative projects, I worked on “Spooky” Letter-Writing, RAD Ballet Syllabus Exam preparation for my students, working in my journals and writing with my new fountain pens in addition to regular article-writing, choreography, video filming and editing.

Twenty-Four 24s in 2024

At the end of October I published my 24th Blog Article, Pen Friends – Inky Adventures in Writing just happened to be the one, and I’ve just got to complete reading one more book and that goal will also be accomplished. Of course I’ll continue publishing articles and the rest beyond the arbitrary twenty-four goal (inspired by Jess/JashiiCorrin on YouTube), this creative challenge is just a playful way to track various metrics I wish to keep an eye on.

Having found such a structure useful this year, for 2025 I may reduce the number of categories to 20, and raise the actions by one for a catchy “Twenty 25s in 2025.”

In a basalt cavern on a tour of the brewery
Basalt volcanic cavern in Germany: learned it could erupt again at any time!

Media Musings

My October in terms of reading, listening, and viewing pleasures:

Books & Reading

Books Read

Still reading along on my nonfiction picks (poetry, scripture, self-help), and I completed two novels in October:

  • We Were Liars is a modern, sophisticated suspense novel from New York Times bestselling author, National Book Award finalist, and Printz Award honoree E. Lockhart. Read it And if anyone asks you how it ends, just LIE.” The writing is lyrical, characters endearing, and oh wow the reveal is so intense! Not usually a suspense reader, but this one was riveting, mysterious, tragic, and well-suited to spooky season.
  • My latest in the silly action-packed Finlay Donovan Rom-Com series by Elle Cosimano is #4: Finlay Donovan Rolls the Dice and I appreciate the self-conscious commentary on how absurd the plot action is from the main characters themselves, a light antidote to the heaviness of the previous read.
Confirmed my ballot was accepted for the General Election, on my mind in October

Listening Highlights

Favorite things heard over the course of the month go here, such as concerts, songs, pieces of music, playlists, podcasts and more.

Music: Songs & Albums

It was time to update and enjoy my Spooky October Sounds Playlist on YouTube, including tracks such as:

Viewing Highlights

Films

October movies watched:

  • Will & Harper” is a documentary of a real friendship
  • “The Age of Adelaide” was nicely done but strange, kind of like “Benjamin Button”
  • “Lonely Planet” was about a writer’s retreat, well-acted but not my favorite plot-wise
Series

Series streamed in October:

  • Poker Face” is definitely one of my favorites of the year, Natasha Lyonne is so talented!
  • Worst Ex Ever” is a collection of true crime stories
Maria Laach Abbey 1093
Maria Laach Abbey has sat beside this crater lake since 1093

Questions for Reflection

  • What do you want to remember from October/the past month?
  • Which books, musical selections, and viewing do you currently recommend?
  • How are you planning for a creative and festive season?

Resources for Further Exploration

Let’s keep in touch, keep dancing, and never hesitate to let me know if I can be of service, would love to see you in my email newsletter or on social media!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
she/her or they/them
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach
helping multi-passionate creatives dance through their difficulties,
taking leaps of faith into fulfillment through coaching, yoga & dance education

Pen Friends – Inky Adventures in Writing

Lifelong learner and curious forever student that I am, the journey of reading & writing, absorbing new information and perspectives, and honing skills is endless. While I use both analog and digital tools to create and organize my work and thoughts, I find I am more focused and inspired and less distracted when writing with pen and paper.

Back in October of 2022, after the Autumn Equinox had passed in the Northern Hemisphere, I posted an article about how I was doing analog creative work in my journals, Current Notebook Lineup – Analog Journals for Creativity. That party continues, and I’ve continued to branch out and refine my writing game.

Again feeling all the back-to-school and fall feels, this year I wrote an article about harnessing the season’s energy, Building Momentum by Seizing the Back-to-School Mood: Ambiance, Supplies & Action, and now I’m elaborating on my inky story. 

Personal History of Writing Utensils

This is for my true Pen Friends, people who are nerdy about their writing tools and creative gear, and for my future self as I reflect on my journey, from the grand themes to the minute moments of beauty like those when pen meets paper.

Pen Friends Video on YouTube

Ballpoint, Gel & Fountain Pen

School Days

In school it was #2 pencils and cheap ballpoints that I didn’t need to worry too much about losing, along with the occasional fancy pencil, pen, or eraser from Bell, Book, and Candle, our local Sanrio stationery store in Kailua-Kona. I can still recall the scent of that little shop, fresh plastic with a distinct fruity fragrance all it’s own.

Although I love beautiful things, I’ve never been a pen snob and can appreciate the smooth writing and accessibility of reliable basics such as the BIC Cristal, whose influence on literacy worldwide I just learned about this year in this video:

I didn’t realize what a difference the Bic Cristal made to world writing tool access

We’re not going into pencils, markers, and highlighters which I use in my Bullet Journal and elsewhere today, but I find all of those creative materials fun and helpful in different contexts.

My young romantic self was definitely drawn to old-fashioned supplies like quill pens, inks, stamping and so forth but I didn’t stay loyal to crafts other than scrapbooking (still intermittent) 🖊️

My first fountain pen was a disposable, probably a Pilot Varsity, which I used for epic emotional and informational (but inconsistent) diary entries. 1996 was quite a summer: I got my driver’s license, had phenomenal guest ballet teachers at our dance intensive, and injured my knee for the first time during a jazz layout. Unfortunately the writing performance/experience didn’t lead me to stick with the pen long term.

College & Professional

Wanting to make the scholarly tasks of note-taking, essay-writing, and studying more pleasurable, Sakura Gelly Roll Gel Pens were my go-to for all my notes in college. With so many colors and a smooth aesthetic (plus a discount when I worked for the bookstore), I couldn’t resist. Now I prefer the fatter, juicier Moonlight 10 version which also show up splendidly on black paper as punchy accents.

Then Pilot G2 and other such gel pens then took over the writing scene, which I devoured in several iterations including Dr. Grip, eventually with refill cartridges. I did very much like their smoothness, comfort in writing, variety of colors and line widths available, and reliability.

Mostly blue was the ink color for me in those days, professional and friendly like the president of Whitman College at that time, Tom Cronin (we’ll ignore his poor taste in “friendly” fonts, Comic Sans, and focus on the fact that he read bedtime stories to groups of students in the dorms as a study break).

Working to balance experimentation with many media with not over-consuming gear and supplies. Not wasting or taking a greater environmental toll than necessary.

Environmental as well as weight limitations made me a minimal gearhead, and a Write in the Rain pen went long-distance hiking with me and my then-partner on the Appalachian Trail. Wanting to be able to have my words withstand the elements, I found that pencil/graphite is good against water as well, but can be smeary as well as be erased.

LAMY Pens, Twix, Colored Pencils at the Rose Garden on Artist’s Dates like this one

Grad School & Beyond

Taking up that lovely Write in the Rain pen again in recent years with my consistent heavy writing practices, I found that for me, these ink cartridges (though lovely!) are too expensive for extensive writing such as morning pages and journaling.

Refillable, retractable Ballpoint Cartridge Pens seemed to be more environmentally-friendly, and I tried a wide range of refills. My endless thirst for ink with daily Morning Pages, journaling, note-taking, etc. led to frequent replacement. Refill after refill still seemed excessive.

Often receiving thoughtful gifts from the families of my students in Honolulu, a Platinum Preppy Fountain Pen helped inspire me at a time of total re-invention. Part of me wishes I had kept this lightweight beauty during my international move, but once I used up the cartridges it came with and needed to downsize, I let it go.

Now I know that converters are available and they can be dropped-fill converted too! Smooth writing experience and I found the Violet ink to be a bright cheering orchid/bougainvillea/magenta color. Only problem was the ink is water-soluble, so I lost some words to rain. It would be fun to play with such a pen and a water brush for sketching.

My preference for water-proof and archival inks confirmed by lost words due to rain

Teaching Artist’s Tools

Waterproof, portable, and reliable in all writing scenarios, the Fisher Space Pen (in a matte black bullet form) was a lovely birthday gift from my girlfriend’s mother which I have since used in my Daily Log journal. It can truly write in all conditions, the ink cartridge is proving to last well for short notes and the pen is small enough to have with me at all times.

Sakura Pigma Micron fine-liners are indeed great for Bullet Journaling and permanent sketching. For my own Bullet Journal use, I first picked up a versatile 03 width, then added a bolder 08 and super-fine 01. The archival ink, lack of bleed-through, and precision are wonderful, but the tips can be easy to damage and the plastic disposability is not my favorite.

The Muji Multi-Colored ballpoint pen I got here in Cologne last year is unfortunately not durable enough to withstand the punishment I put it through, but it was a handy way to do color-coordination for a time.

Looking for a more sustainable option, a long-term high-quality writing experience brought me back to fountain pens.

This back-to-school season, and after much research and shopping around, I invested in two LAMY fountain pens (and shared about it on IG here), a blacked-out AL-Star that now has an extra fine nib and a converter with Octopus Fluids Black Document Ink in it, and a Vista demonstrator in part thanks to Hemingway Jones on YouTube with a medium nib and Octopus Fluids Violet Document Ink in it. Sooo delightful to write with, gorgeous ink color, glad my research was successful! The AL-Star is replacing my old fine-liner (on IG here) and other everyday tools wonderfully as I hoped.

So far, the new writing tools are proving very inspiring, sparking a righteous cycle of creativity and reveling in the experience.

“School” Supply Stock-Up video 2024

Observing my new fountain pen hobby, Ela found her first fountain pen, a wooden and red plastic LAMY abc (unfortunately the cap it came with, that had her name on it, is missing, but she crafted a new one!), and a Parker pen gifted to her by her grandma, but her Charcoal Safari that got her through the rest of her school days (they’re required to use fountain pen in German schools) is not yet to be found.

Meanwhile, I’m salivating over all of the beautiful inks and pens in this wide world of stationery, while trying to keep my use thoughtful, minimal, and sustainable.

Writing candy in the form of assorted colors and flavors of ink cartridges

Resources for Further Exploration

Questions for Reflection

  • What is your favorite writing utensil?
  • Do you write in an analog format? What are your preferred media & supplies?
  • Which creative project is currently your focus?
  • What would you like to try in the future?
…and a Kaweko Perkeo Peony Blossom has now joined the fray

Glad you joined me for this nerdy voyage of writing and writerly tools.  

More dance, yoga, and coaching content coming at you again soon, would love to see you in my email newsletter or on social media until then!

Blythe Stephens, MFA, Bliss Catalyst
they/them or she/her
Creator of A Blythe Coach: dance through your difficulties
and take leaps of faith into a joyful, fulfilling life

Dance Shoe Blues – Footwear Identity Crisis – What to wear to class?

I’m in a dance shoe identity crisis!

It’s not too serious, though a common concern among people trying out or returning to various dance styles.

The exploration is ongoing as our knowledge of dance techniques grows, our own bodies and the dance styles and shoes themselves change and evolve.

Folks often ask why I mostly wear socks to teach and dance these days, and what they themselves should wear to beginner ballet or other styles of dance classes.

This year I’ve been studying Argentine Tango for the first time, and that requires different considerations in terms of footwear, due to the type of flooring and the technique being wholly different from the ballet and modern dance studios and stages to which I am accustomed.

I’ve recently been sharing my creative supplies and EDC/Everyday Carry essentials, so along those lines, here is an informal chat with more information about what dance shoes I regularly use and what is appropriate for a first movement class for adults or children.

Dance Shoe Blues & FAQs – Fitting Footwear video on YouTube

Dancing in Socks?

So why do I wear socks and what are they?

My dancey socks are just plain black, very thin and high cotton-content (80-90% or higher ideally) for breathability and grip, business-type socks which I purchase in 3-packs at a local department store. I have a bunch of pairs so I can wash between wears, like them to teach yoga and ballet, barre and barre a terre, modern and contemporary…

Wearing socks instead of ballet slippers or dancing with bare feet was a practice I started since I suffered from a plantar wart (lots of dance floors in those days too, hard to know where it came from!) while getting my MFA in dance and teaching.

While re-staging a modern dance piece called “Blue Green,” Betsy Fisher taught me to dye thin white cotton socks to my skin tone, so that the visual effect was that of bare feet. I found them very comfortable, with a bit of protection and as they wore in, a good mix of slip and grip for the technically demanding piece.

During that time it was also becoming a contemporary dance trend of black socks for dancing. There are specifically dance socks on the market, with technical features in terms of support, but I haven’t tried any myself yet.

Sometimes I also dance in ballet slippers, pointe shoes, jazz shoes, or other suitable footwear, such as sneakers outside or even boots.

Maybe socks are right for you as well, or perhaps after your first lesson or chatting with the instructor you find there is a dance shoe just for you.

“Blue Green” at Kennedy Theatre

Blue Green,” performed by myself and Mareva Minerbi, choreography by Carl Wolz, music composed by Francis Poulenc, re-staged by Betsy Fisher at the University of Hawai’i Kennedy Theatre.

Starting New Dance Styles

The best advice to new or returning students: consult with your teacher before investing in a specific technical shoe and then get properly fitted.

Wait until you’re committed and have a track record of participation rather than buying a bunch of gear before knowing what to look for. Yes, shopping for kit is fun, but not a practical approach to investing in the right sort of equipment. We need to get to know the demands of the craft a little bit first before

My new dance style this year is Argentine Tango and I have yet to buy specific shoes that would be best suited, still considering what style to invest in for myself. Observing and talking with the instructor, taking a look at what folks wear in our studio and in videos online, and experiencing the movements and the floors will ultimately inform the decision of which shoes are right.

Ballet Shoes for Kids

For children, it’s generally practical with ballet slippers to size up a little. As long as they are not too loose, this accommodates for fast foot growth especially important because too-tight shoes get painful and we need to make sure to have room for the toes to spread and move.

Here it is especially important to talk to the prospective teacher/studio first before shopping to make sure to buy the approved footwear and not waste money on the wrong style. Wherever possible, avoid extra decoration, bows, prints, elastic bands and ribbons as these distract young movers.

Adult Dancing Feet

It might be that your feet and needs change as an adult as well, so don’t wear your former dancing shoes if you find they are no longer comfortable! Widening, lengthening, growing stronger or changing form in other ways, an important feature of movement technique as an adult is adapting to our changing state. Addressing any aches, pains, and challenges that come along, especially in the feet since they affect the whole body, is important, and we may need to pursue physical therapy or orthopedic consultation, professional shoe fitting or other appropriate treatment so that we can keep on dancing our whole life long.

Got up on my old pointe shoes recently for fun and the Alphabet Superset

Flooring is Important

Even more important than footwear is the floor on which you are dancing, both the surface texture and the structure underneath. For high-impact dance techniques such as ballet, which involves a lot of jumping and demanding maneuvers, it is critical for our dancing longevity to have a properly sprung/springy under-floor construction as well as a smooth, clean and slightly grippy surface. We are rightfully careful and picky about our floors.

Shoes must then be compatible with the flooring type (not too sticky, not too slippery) and can only somewhat address the surface to an extent. Think of running shoes on concrete, you get some cushioning to the joints but it’s still pretty gnarly. Both floors and shoes need the right amount of bounce, slip or grip for the dance technique and our own physicality, and these are factors that take time and experience to consider.

Questions for Reflection

  • In what attire are you most comfortable moving?
  • What essential items nourish your creativity and productivity?
  • Which physical things support living your purpose?
  • Which type(s) of dancing have you always wanted to try?
  • What type of shoe would you like to invest in for your new dance style?
  • What creative challenges are you currently facing?
Get Down Daily was one of my most fun challenges yet, and is ongoing!

Resources for Further Exploration

I created this Digest of Dance Resources I’ve created so far to celebrate International Dance Day this year and my library of Ballet & Dance video resources includes theoretical and historical lessons, movement tutorials, and practice sessions. The videos are handily grouped into thematic playlists many of which as suitable to beginners, such as:

Here are a few past creative challenges that I have shared, with future opportunities to be announced as well:

Further opportunities to learn with me:

  • Balletlicious with Blythe Ballet Syllabus Google Hyper-Doc with Links to tutorials available by request to students and weekly email newsletter subscribers
  • My approximately-weekly Email Newsletter itself is a feast of dancey and creative living resources, featuring my latest creations and those of other awesome folks
  • Live Classes In-Studio & Online: Mindful Movement (Ballet, Barre a Terre, Dance, Yoga…) to move together at home or anywhere in the world

It is a fun lifelong exploration and I wish you all the best in your dancing adventures! Let me know how I can be of service as you dance through life.

Blythe Stephens, MFA, Bliss Catalyst
they/them or she/her
Creator of A Blythe Coach: dance through your difficulties
and take leaps of faith into a joyful, fulfilling life

DISCLAIMER: A Blythe Coach recommends that you consult your physician regarding the applicability of any recommendations and follow all safety instructions before beginning any exercise program. When participating in any exercise or exercise program, there is the possibility of physical injury. If you engage in this exercise or exercise program, you agree that you do so at your own risk, are voluntarily participating in these activities, assume all risk of injury to yourself.

A Sensational September & Season – 2024 Month 9 & Quarter 3 Review

September I really got in the swing of “Back-to-School” and my Fall schedule, celebrating the high summer into fall, looking back at Quarter 3 and forward to Quarter 4 with a new year on it’s way before we know it.

September slips from Summer to Fall

Here in Cologne, Germany, the weather was right on cue, September heralding early Fall with cooling temperatures, grey and rainy days in the mix of golden and gleaming ones, both showing off the first changing and falling leaves.

Wolkenburg with Ela on the red carpet, lovely August wedding location in Cologne!

The warmest quarter of the year was gratifyingly summery right up until the Autumn Equinox. Staying close to home in Cologne in quarter three (whereas Q2 was packed with travel and we’ll enjoy at least a weekend getaway in Q4), we got outside a lot for walks, some of which included Rufio the cat, picnics, botanical and rose garden visits, and showing visiting friends and family our pretty city.

My girlfriend’s sister’s wedding in August was definitely a highlight of the quarter, along Ela and my 6th Anniversary in September and both PRIDE and Nonbinary People’s Day in July.

A dear friend who is one of the reasons I originally visited and now live in Germany, visited with her young daughter in September and we showed them some sights and playgrounds. Then my Mom’s cousin and his wife dropped in during their Rhine river cruise and we had a nice Kölsch in the old city.

Plus we celebrated late Summer with Ela’s stepdad at a Sommerfest in his garden, enjoyed dinner and a show with her mother, tours of artists’ studios and historic monuments with friends, and a traditional-style Oktoberfest a friends’ house in a nearby village. This year we wore new Lederhosen and I donned my Bavarian hiking hat, very authentic!

The presidential election in the US continued to loom, I submitted my German tax returns, and my Dad had an important surgery this quarter, at least the latter two for now coming to a promising conclusion.

September & Q3 BuJo Review – Month 9 2024 Creative Journal video on YouTube

Bullet Journaling & Planning

In September I continued to update my Monthly, Weekly, and Daily logs and Annual Collections and set up my October pages in my notebooks.

The above YouTube Video is a flip-through of the month and Q3 in my Seasonal Book, with my goals, glows, media favorites, and events.

I also updated my data tracking in a cumulative Google Sheet, and created a BuJo spread for Self-Care September and a Q3 Review at-a-glance, both below.

Deeper reflection continues as I work on my annual projects in Q4 and start to consider 2025 while also enjoying the present moment.

Q3 Review BuJo spread in my seasonal book: results, highlights, favorites

Teaching & Coaching

In September I hit my stride with a fairly regularly recurring weekly schedule and good energy. It is a delightful challenge to get to know new students and truly a delight to see devoted learners return. Even with a Summer Break at some schools & studios in the mix, the quarter as a whole was very active, with a new record for classes taught since moving to Germany.

Regular Mindful Movement classes in Balletlicious Ballet Barre+ and Yummy Gentle Yoga continued throughout, studio classes in Ballet and Barre a Terre took a two-week break before resuming. School began again and I introduced new elective offerings, also scheming about the Back-to-School into Fall season and the remainder of the year.

There are a couple of coaching slots available this season and I will keep you posted on further offerings as they come together!

Writing & Publishing Articles

In September I published three articles to the blog, for a total of 8 in Quarter 3:

Filming & Sharing Videos

My YouTube Channel and Blog have been where I’ve seen the most growth in visibility and with your help I may be able to reach 1,000 subscribers to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel before the end of 2024!

I published four videos to the A Blythe Coach YouTube Channel in September, bringing the total for Quarter 3 to 14:

August BuJo Review – 2024 Month 8 Creative Journaling Video on YouTube
“School” Supplies Stock-Up Video on YouTube
Notebook, Journal, Planner Lineup Update Video on YouTube
Start-the-Day Circles, Spirals, Roll & Stretch Warmup Video on YouTube

Connecting: Email & Social Media

I sent four weekly Email Newsletters in September, full of value-packed resources for fellow creatives. This brought my Q3 total to 12.

The best way to keep up-to-date on everything I’m coaching, teaching, creating and sharing about as well as my favorite work from other creators is to subscribe to my weekly email newsletter.

Would truly love to be connected to you there, here, on social media, online or in-person!

Rose Garden at Fort X in Cologne, one of my top locations for Artist Dates

Creative Challenges

Having completed my Alphabet Superset and Camp NaNoWriMo in July, in August I focused on rest and recovery, reading and writing, planning for upcoming challenges and behind-the-scenes development.

Then in September I participated in and shared about Self-Care September, bringing the number of such creative challenges that I took on in Quarter 3 to three, on-track with my vague idea that about one per month is a fun objective.

Self-Care September

Self-Care September – Practicing Exquisite Well-Being in Order to Serve is the article I wrote about how I’ve taken on this self-loving challenge in 2023 & 2024, it’s origins, and continuing healthy habits all year long.

Self-Care September 2024 BuJo spread, shared to Instagram with other tips throughout the month

Twenty-Four 24s in 2024

In July I sent my 24th Email Newsletter and in August I published my 24th YouTube video of 2024, bringing my total of “completed” 24s to 13 in Q4, with Blog Articles published or Books read likely being next (2 more after to reach 24 in both categories!)… Of course I’ll continuing sharing videos and publishing articles and the rest beyond the arbitrary twenty-four goal, this creative challenge is just a playful way to track various metrics I wish to keep an eye on, inspired by Jess/JashiiCorrin on YouTube.

Considering how to structure such an overarching challenge for myself in 2025, I may reduce the number of categories to 20, and raise the actions by one for a catchy “Twenty 25s in 2025.”

24+ in 2024 Bullet Journal Collection in my Annual Book, 6 months in

Media Musings

What caused a sensation in September, in terms of reading, listening, and viewing and some of my picks for Quarter 3:

Books & Reading

A new article I published in August, Summer Fun in or out of the Sun, features some of my all-time favorite hot-weather reads and I’ve found a couple new discoveries this year to add to the list.

Books Read

I completed two novels in September, bringing my quarterly total to 4:

  • Red, White, & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston was a cute alternate-reality political gay romance and fun to read together with my sweetie (we also read another book of theirs last year, One Last Stop), after which we viewed the 2023 film version with a critical eye, and then uncarley’s commentary, also humorous
  • Sandwich by Catherine Newman is one of my favorite books I’ve read so far this year, a story about three generations spending a summer week in a cabin on the cape and also about the beautiful, grotesque, transcendent, profane, hilarious tragedy of life, with a menopausal main character.
An open art studio at Fort X which we toured in September

Listening Highlights

Favorite things heard over the course of the month go here, such as concerts, songs, pieces of music, playlists, podcasts and more.

Music: Songs & Albums

In September I was still enjoying some sweet Summer jams while planning lots of musical fun for Fall. Interestingly, I didn’t record any standout new tracks, just kept hearing all the ear worms by Chappell Roan such as:

Playlists
Straddle side stretch screenshot from my Lithely Leaning video on YouTube

Viewing Highlights

My personal highlights in Quarter 3 viewing were seeing the Trocks live at the Koelner Philharmonie, and the Olympic Opening performances from Paris covered on YouTube (so much dancing and musical talent!) Here’s some of what I saw last month, wrapping up Quarter 3.

Films

September Movies watched were enjoyable and full of action, suitable to the time and place but not necessarily highlights of the quarter or year:

  • “Rebel Ridge”
  • “The Union”
Series

Series on streaming services and so forth I savored in September:

  • Young Rock,” a fictional future bio series about Dwayne Johnson as a presidential candidate telling stories from his youth, is light entertainment
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine​,” though far from a new release, is still so ahead of its time and turning into a surprisingly soothing way to unwind before bed
  • The “Monsters: the Lyle and Erik Menendez Story” series on Netflix is disturbing but fascinatingly nuanced in perspective as well and a chilling true crime for those into that sort of thing, which we also followed up with the new The Menendez Brothers documentary
In new Lederhosen with Ela at our friends’ Oktoberfest celebration

Questions for Reflection

  • What summer (or last season) memories are you preserving?
  • How are you planning for a productive fall (or next season) and end-of-year?
  • What will you pursue, and what will you let go?
  • How can I support you in taking flight this year?

Resources for Further Exploration

Special offerings for Autumn, Winter, springing into a New Year, and more coming up soon!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
she/her or they/them
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach
helping multi-passionate creatives dance through their difficulties,
taking leaps of faith into fulfillment through coaching, yoga & dance education

To-Enjoy List for Quarter 4 – Blogtoberfest 2024 – finishing the year satisfied

Last December I participated in an annual recap/reflection blog challenge with Judith Peters, aka “Sympatexter” and it inspired me not just to write yearly summary (which I typically undertake in one form or another), but further to publish monthly reflections since then. Sorry to those who don’t speak German, her challenges, blogs, and videos are all auf Deutsch.

Peters also hosts a “Blogtober” blogging challenge in October, so I decided to jump in for that as well, with the theme this month being to write about what I’d like to accomplish and experience in the last quarter before the end of 2024.

So much can happen in 3 months, even in a matter of days or hours, and now is a great opportunity to take stock of resolutions and goals for the year and and decide what we still want to take action towards achieving, and by the same token what is no longer a priority.

On my list below, some items are bigger and long-term goals, some small, some Fall and holiday Bucket-List type items and experiences to savor.

Rufio the cat frolics in the fallen leaves
Rufio the cat loves frolicking in fallen leaves, stalking birds after the hazelnuts

To-Enjoy in Quarter 4

  1. Bake Pumpkin Muffins
  2. Leaf-peeping autumnal walks 🍁 🍂
  3. Send 31 Pieces of Spooky Correspondence
  4. Decorate for Halloween, wear flannel
  5. Sort and deep clean bedroom bookshelves
  6. Autumnal Reading TBR: Letters to a Young Poet, Rebecca, Nancy Drew, The Cat Who mysteries…
  7. Make/Have Doctor Appointments: Dentist, Gynecologist, Dermatologist, Orthopedist…preventive care
  8. Cook up veggie Soups: African Peanut, Carrot Ginger, Tomato-Potato
  9. Increased Visibility & Community: 1,000 YouTube Subscribers, IG Followers, Email Subscribers
  10. Increased Income: magnetize students, clients, get a raise, profit
  11. Financial Fitness: Pay off Credit Card, make a solid plan for 2025
  12. Satisfactory completion of the RAD / Royal Academy of Dance Ballet Exams by my Tanzschule Tanzraum students, sense of accomplishment and improved technique and artistry (Grades 1, 3)
  13. Movement Research – explore the Tanz Archiv in Cologne, improvisation practice, choreograph (below)
  14. Tango improvement, learning to lead and follow: a new style that Ela and I started this year and we’ve since fallen off practicing a bit, but want to keep working on it
  15. “Wine” Weekend Getaway with friends in Germany in October
  16. Plan next trip home, next romantic getaway with Ela
  17. Complete “Twenty-Four 24’s”: Read Books (2 More, see TBR above)
  18. Blog Articles published (4 more)
  19. Poems (13 more)
  20. Letters (13 more), should be no problem with Spooky Correspondence October above
  21. Choreographies (9 more)
  22. Practice Instrument (all 24 – maybe December)
  23. Music Playlists (19 – partial is ok)
  24. Workshops & Challenges (11 – partial is ok)
  25. Print Photos and scrapbook: Family Wedding (August), bikes at garden, cat walk, Oktoberfest party, friends and family visits…
  26. Set up new Bullet Journals: Seasonal/Quarterly Book and Annual BuJo, reflect and celebrate 2024, plan 2025
  27. Savor Glühwein at the Weihnachtsmärkte: mulled wine (ideally at a Christmas Market in Cologne) and hot cocoa are two of my favorite things in Winter
  28. Decorate for Christmas, wear my tacky sweater
  29. Take a hot bath with essential oils

Questions for Reflection

  • What is your Word(s) of the Year?
  • What were your Quarter 3 highlights and lowlights?
  • How do you want to enjoy Quarter 4?
  • What holidays, fall and winter traditions are important to you?
  • How can I best support you this season?

Resources for Further Exploration

The best way to stay up-to-date on everything I’m coaching, teaching, creating and sharing is to subscribe to my weekly email newsletter.

Glad to connect with you here, there, on social media (IG @ablythecoach), online or in-person!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
she/her or they/them
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach
helping multi-passionate creatives dance through their difficulties,
taking leaps of faith into fulfillment through coaching, yoga & dance education

Self-Care September – Practicing Exquisite Well-Being in Order to Serve

I find Self-Care September to be very well-timed to balance what can be a very demanding time of year, with Back-to-School, the end of Quarter 3, the holidays and a new year looming.

In September this year I shared some examples on social media, such as the importance (for me, personally) of bountiful Snacks when on-the-go, feel-good Stretching, stocking up on my Creative Supplies, taking time for Mindful Movement, and cooking up early-fall snacks like Apple Cinnamon Muffins, Chocolate Chip Cookies and Popcorn among other favorites.

Creative planning in my Bullet Journal, here Self-Care September 2024 spread

Self-Care for Community

Self-Care need not be selfish, and in fact the concept stems from community organizing, social activism, and sustaining service to others. A summary of this history can be found in Lenora E. Houseworth’s article The Radical History of Self-Care:

“Trailblazers and former Black Panther leaders Angela Davis and Ericka Huggins adopted mindfulness techniques and movement arts like yoga and meditation while incarcerated. Following their release, they both began championing the power of proper nutrition and physical movement to preserve one’s mental health while navigating an inequitable, sociopolitical system, creating wellness programs for adults and children in recreational centers across the country, in neighborhoods like Brooklyn, New York, and Oakland, California…By the 1980s, activist and writer Audre Lorde amplified the intersectionality of self-care and civil rights as she dealt with cancer, in her book A Burst of Light: and Other Essays, which now stands as a manifesto for the Black female identity.”

It is worthwhile to take a critical look at how corporations/capitalism have co-opted Self-Care and make sure we take on practices that are accessible, authentic, and promote true well-being. We do not have full control over our health and well-being as individuals and it is therefore important to focus on where we can make an impact for ourselves and others.

Self-Care September Structure

I first learned about Self-Care September as a month-long challenge from Laura Burns, @radicalbodylove on Instagram who shared this year: “If you’ve been around a while, you may know that every year I host a month-long celebration of all things SELF CARE related. What you may not know is that it’s really stressful and tiring, and often my own self-care suffers in the process. ⁠

For our 10th year celebrating this amazing topic I’m changing things up! Instead of a daily theme, we’re going to have weekly themes. That way I can practice what I preach and focus on actual self care in my life.”

For daily prompts to inspire your own self-care practices all September (or any month!) long, check out her 2022 Daily Prompts (the 9th annual celebration) or those of prior years.

I’ve come up with lots of ideas in my Bullet Journal Brainstorming spreads for 2023, below, and 2024, above. It’s your time of self-care, so you do you, when you want, how you want!

Self-Care September 2023 Bullet Journal Spread (snuggling in bed!)

Simple Self-Care

Here are a few places to look when seeking to up your own self-care game and feel refreshed. Just start somewhere, start small, fun, and easy and enjoy the benefits. Let me know how I can support you, as well!

Rest, Recovery & Energy Support

Sleep, rest, and relaxation are important elements of self-care as well as promoting and managing our energy. I’ve written on the topic before and will continue to sing the praises of rest to restore our powers of patience, positivity, ability to learn and achieve:

Nourishment

Adequate nutrition is important for dancers and all people, as is a healthy relationship with food and body:

15-Minute Start-the-Day Circles, Spirals, Roll & Stretch Video on YouTube

Mindful Movement

Dancing, yoga, stretching, going for a walk, hike, or bike ride, these all fill my mindful movement cup. For others it pay be participating in favorite sports, martial arts, or going for a swim.

Above, a fresh YouTube video with my 15-Minute Start-the-Day Circles, Spirals, Roll & Stretch warmup, and following more ideas to move you:

Meditation, Breathing, Yoga Nidra

Focusing the breath, a mantra, guided visualization, constructive rest, Yoga Nidra/Non-Sleep Deep Rest and other techniques are wonderful supports for self-care:

Straddle side stretch screenshot from my Lithely Leaning video on YouTube

Mood Music

A particularly accessible way to shift the mood is to put on fitting music. Sometimes I love to wallow in sadness or bittersweet emotion, other times get all pumped with fiery energy or be moved to celebrate life with joy. Some music includes And I’m always down for music that makes me want to dance!

Coaching Support & Accountability

Having trained with Accomplishment Coaching, I have many tools to support well-being, which I use myself and with clients. A free way to receive community support and accountability is to participate in a creative challenge, or maybe you want to experience the power of one-one-one personal life coaching to take your practices from self-care and maintenance to leader- or artist-care:

Rose Garden at Fort X in Cologne, one of my top locations for Artist Dates

Questions for Reflection

  • What practices support your well-being?
  • Which skills or habits are you working on currently? 
  • Which simple steps or structures of support are missing that could make a difference?
  • Which sounds, music, or soundtrack inspire you to study, write, or create?
  • What essential items nourish your creativity and productivity?
  • How do you organize your thoughts, ideas, plans, and studies?
  • How can I support you in self-care, self-love, self-actualization?

Resources for Further Exploration

Self-care poem 2024

Of course, Self-Care is important all year! You can try these ideas out anytime, and I will continue to pass along resources I think you will find valuable.

Upcoming articles and special offerings for a creative season, and until then the best way to keep up-to-date on everything I’m coaching, teaching, creating and sharing about as well as my favorite work from other creators is to subscribe to my weekly email newsletter.

Glad to connect with you here, there, on social media (IG @ablythecoach), online or in-person!

Blythe Stephens, MFA & Bliss Catalyst
she/her or they/them
Creator of A Blythe Coach @ablythecoach
helping multi-passionate creatives dance through their difficulties,
taking leaps of faith into fulfillment through coaching, yoga & dance education

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