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I stepped out of grief -- by dancing with fire

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    When I was six years old,
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    our house caught fire
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    and my mother died.
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    It was a cold, February night in Michigan.
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    Our chimney had recently been fixed,
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    so we had a warm fire
    going in the fireplace.
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    My younger sister and I
    were sitting next to our dog
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    and coloring with a brand new
    box of colored pencils
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    when Mom said it was time for bed.
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    We'd planned to go up north that night
    for a weekend of snowmobiling
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    and sledding,
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    but it was already dark
    and snowing outside,
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    so we decided to leave
    the next morning instead.
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    We went upstairs,
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    brushed our teeth,
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    climbed into bed --
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    my sister's room right next to the stairs
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    and mine at the far end of the hallway.
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    Our parents tucked us in
    and kissed us goodnight,
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    then left the door open just a crack
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    and the hallway light on,
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    as it always was.
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    In the middle of the night
    I woke up sweating,
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    confused because I couldn't
    see that hallway light.
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    I started shouting for my parents
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    until finally I heard words
    that I'll never forget:
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    "Dave, it's a fire."
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    We later found out
    that our fire from earlier
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    had burned through an unrepaired
    crack in the chimney
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    causing the fireplace doors to explode
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    and fire to just pour
    into the living room.
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    I remember my mom
    running down to my sister's room,
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    frantically searching for her
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    and finally finding her on the floor.
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    I crawled after her on my hands and knees,
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    trying not to breathe in the smoke.
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    I remember standing
    next to my sister's room,
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    trying to turn on that hallway light,
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    but it was already on,
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    I just couldn't see it because
    the smoke was so thick.
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    I remember feeling the heat
    of the fire on my skin
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    and hearing the sound of it
    as it climbed up the stairs.
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    My dad ran down to my bedroom window
    as an escape route,
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    but it was February
    and it was frozen shut.
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    Eventually, he broke the window
    and pried it open,
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    his arms and hands covered
    in glass and cuts.
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    He lifted my sister and me
    onto an awning under the window
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    and told us to shout for help.
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    Not seeing my mom,
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    he considered going back
    into the fire to find her,
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    but after looking at my sister and me
    huddled together on that roof,
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    and knowing that neither of them
    may make it out,
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    he stayed with us,
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    calling her name
    through the window instead.
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    After a few minutes,
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    a man driving down the street
    saw the smoke and fire,
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    drove onto our lawn,
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    climbed onto the roof of his car
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    and told us to jump into his arms.
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    We'd never seen him before,
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    and even though he saved our lives,
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    we never saw him again.
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    We were brought over to a neighbor's house
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    while Dad continued to wait
    on the roof for my mom,
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    reaching his arms and hands
    through the window
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    and into the fire,
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    calling her name over and over.
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    He said later that when the fire
    department arrived,
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    they carried him down the ladder
    just as a lower-level window shattered
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    and burst into flames.
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    It took the fire department
    longer to find my mom.
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    She'd been on the floor
    of my bedroom the entire time,
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    pinned down by a dresser
    that had fallen on her leg.
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    We think she went back
    to look for our dog,
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    but by the time the fire department
    reached them it was too late.
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    She died on the way to the hospital.
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    Dad was in critical condition
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    with smoke inhalation and burns
    and cuts over a third of his body.
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    He spent nearly a month in the hospital,
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    unable to attend Mom's funeral
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    and undergoing multiple,
    excruciating skin graft surgeries.
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    My sister and I stayed
    with a neighbor across the street,
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    but we would sit in front
    of their living room window for hours
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    just staring at the remains
    of our burnt home.
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    After a few days it became evident
    that we would need to go
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    and stay with some
    different family friends.
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    The next few years were tough.
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    As a single father of two young girls,
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    Dad did his very best to provide for us
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    as we all tried to grieve and recover.
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    We began to move on in this new reality.
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    Dad bought a new house
    down the street --
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    without a fireplace --
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    and eventually remarried.
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    My sister and I excelled in school.
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    I was a cheerleader
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    and she rode horses
    and played in the band.
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    But nothing could stop the gut-wrenching
    nightmares that haunted me.
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    I would dream of fire,
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    of being trapped in fire with no escape.
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    I remember and even now
    I can feel the sheer panic
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    and the pressure in my chest.
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    Or worse were the dreams where
    I was outside the fire watching it,
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    trying to save the people inside.
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    I'd wake up gasping for breath,
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    tears running down my face
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    and sobbing.
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    When I was 15,
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    a friend of mine,
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    and a very talented artist,
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    painted two abstract portraits for me.
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    One was done in black and white
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    and depicted a scared girl
    cowering in the corner of a room,
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    shadows surrounding her.
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    The other was a bursting rainbow of color;
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    the girl was in the center of the page,
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    arms open and outstretched,
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    clearly full of joy and happiness.
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    He knew my past
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    and he knew that I was
    conflicted and confused,
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    but he'd also seen my potential
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    and wanted to show me what he already saw.
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    After a few years,
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    I realized that these two portraits
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    showed two completely different
    paths before me.
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    A life of fear
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    or the promise and potential for recovery.
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    I had always been drawn
    to that brighter, more colorful painting,
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    but I wasn't quite sure
    what it meant for me
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    or how to transform my current mentality
    into that kind of joy and happiness.
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    So outwardly,
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    I moved on with life --
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    graduated high school,
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    went to college --
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    while inwardly,
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    I continued to bounce
    between the highest of highs
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    and the lowest of lows,
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    like a Ping-Pong ball
    between those two portraits.
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    In 2004, I went backpacking
    through Central America with a friend.
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    We spent our first weekend
    on the island of Roatán,
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    off the coast of Honduras.
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    After a few days there,
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    my friend and I realized
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    that one of our new local friends
    was a fire dancer.
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    Neither of us had ever seen
    fire dancing before,
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    so one night we decided to go see a show.
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    We watched, mesmerized,
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    as he and two friends lit
    these props on fire,
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    threw them in the air
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    and spun them around their bodies.
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    Their moves were deliberate and controlled
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    yet still graceful
    and flowing to the music.
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    I was completely entranced.
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    The next day he offered
    to teach us how to fire dance,
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    or spin --
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    without fire, of course.
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    He showed us the difference
    between a fire staff
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    which is a long piece of wood
    or aluminum with two Kevlar wicks,
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    and fire poi which are Kevlar wicks
    with chains and finger loops.
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    After that first time spinning poi,
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    I knew that this was a hobby
    that I wanted to continue learning
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    in the hopes that maybe one day
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    I might be brave enough
    to try it with fire.
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    Now, I can guess what
    people might be thinking.
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    How was I not terrified
    and running in the opposite direction?
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    And honestly, I don't know.
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    I think that perhaps being a cheerleader
    and doing gymnastics and piano
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    while growing up,
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    these activities were
    very structured and prescribed,
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    whereas this type of flow art
    seemed like a form of meditation
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    but with a focus on fire --
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    this thing that scared me
    so deeply for my entire life.
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    After that first time practicing,
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    my friend and I cobbled together
    our own sets of homemade poi
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    using socks, shoelaces and tennis balls.
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    We did not light shoelaces
    and socks on fire,
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    we just used it for the practice part.
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    But after returning home to Michigan,
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    we decided to buy
    our own sets of actual fire poi.
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    And after a few months,
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    we decided that we were ready
    to light them on fire.
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    We bundled up in cotton layers,
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    got a fire extinguisher,
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    wet a towel for safety,
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    prepared our fuel,
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    gave each other a very energetic
    pep talk and high five,
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    and lit those poi on fire.
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    It was terrifying.
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    Half of my brain was freaking out
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    and thinking, OK, wait,
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    maybe we need to think about this.
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    We should probably stop.
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    The sound of the fire
    as it whooshed by my head
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    was incredibly loud
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    and brought me right back to my childhood.
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    But it was also incredibly exhilarating.
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    The other half of my brain,
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    the creative half was thinking,
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    I can't believe it;
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    I'm a fire dancer.
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    For anyone who spins,
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    there's a level of adrenaline
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    or that rush of fire dancing,
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    but as someone whose life
    had been so greatly impacted by fire,
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    I also felt an immense sense
    of empowerment
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    at being able to control
    and manipulate fire.
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    I made a conscious decision
    to step out of my grief.
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    It was not easy.
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    There's a Nirvana lyric that says
    "I miss the comfort of being sad,"
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    and that was exactly it.
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    I was in control of my sadness.
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    I knew what it would bring to me
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    and I knew what to expect,
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    but I also knew deep down
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    that eventually I had to do
    that really hard work
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    of trying to heal from my past.
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    So I kept practicing.
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    I took a plastic grocery bag,
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    cut it into strips,
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    tied it to the ends of those poi
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    and used it to replicate
    the sound of the fire
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    as it went past my head.
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    And I kept lighting the poi on fire.
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    At some point, something shifted.
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    My perspective on fire dancing changed
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    from something that I was
    apprehensive about
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    to something that brought
    me a sort of peace.
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    Without realizing it,
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    I had initiated my own form
    of exposure therapy.
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    An actual type of psychotherapy
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    where you deliberately expose yourself
    to things that have caused you trauma
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    or scare you.
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    I'd exposed myself to fire
    in this very unique way
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    and had transformed what it meant to me.
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    My nightmares slowed down
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    and now years later have stopped
    almost completely.
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    I started fire dancing not just for myself
    but at events and performances.
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    I started a fire troop with friends
    while living in Dubai,
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    created beautiful art with my sister
    who became a photographer,
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    taught children how to spin
    at birthday parties,
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    performed onstage and at festivals
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    and even taught my own children
    the basics of spinning.
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    And that's not to say
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    that I don't still have
    an apprehension to fire in general.
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    I can practice a move a million times,
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    but then when I try it with fire,
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    I feel that familiar panic
    and tightening in my chest.
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    I'm still apprehensive about living
    in a two-story house
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    or having a fireplace.
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    Every night before I go to sleep,
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    I clear a path between
    my kids' bedroom doors,
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    our bedroom door
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    and all the exit doors
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    in case we need to leave quickly.
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    And it's taken me
    a long time to get onboard
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    with the idea of closing
    bedroom doors at night
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    to slow down a fire,
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    because I'd always thought if I closed
    my kids' bedroom doors,
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    I might not be able to hear them
    like my mom heard me.
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    And of course this is my story;
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    I can't say that I have the answer
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    for someone with a different
    kind of trauma.
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    If the situation had been reversed
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    and I'd lost a child in a fire,
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    I'm not sure that fire dancing
    would be the answer
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    or if I'd even have the capacity
    to get near fire again.
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    But what I can say from my own experience
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    is that after experiencing
    a trauma or hardship,
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    you have a choice between two paths:
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    one path will lead you to a life
    of fear and cowering in the darkness
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    like that black-and-white painting
    I described earlier.
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    You might move on with life,
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    but at the same time you're still clinging
    to that sadness that brings you comfort.
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    The other path --
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    stepping out of grief --
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    will not change or undo anything.
  • 12:04 - 12:05
    It will be hard.
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    It will always be hard,
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    with high mountains
    and deep, dark valleys,
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    but this path looks forward
    and moves forward.
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    When I learned to dance with fire,
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    I learned to reconcile
    the traumatic part of my life
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    with the totality of my life
    as it was still unfolding.
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    Fire became more than just trauma
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    but beauty and art as well:
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    everything, all at once,
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    just like life,
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    flickering and smoldering
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    and burning and dazzling.
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    And somehow in the middle of it,
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    finding a way to dance ...
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    me.
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    Thank you.
Title:
I stepped out of grief -- by dancing with fire
Speaker:
Danielle Torley
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:02

English subtitles

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