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Fighting cancer with dance

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    (Music)
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    [Sanskrit]
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    This is an ode to the mother goddess,
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    that most of us in India learn when we are children.
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    I learned it when I was four
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    at my mother's knee.
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    That year she introduced me to dance,
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    and thus began
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    my tryst with classical dance.
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    Since then -- it's been four decades now --
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    I've trained with the best in the field,
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    performed across the globe,
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    taught young and old alike,
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    created, collaborated,
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    choreographed,
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    and wove a rich tapestry
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    of artistry, achievement and awards.
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    The crowning glory was in 2007,
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    when I received this country's
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    fourth highest civilian award, the Padma Shri,
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    for my contribution to art.
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    (Applause)
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    But nothing, nothing prepared me
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    for what I was to hear
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    on the first of July 2008.
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    I heard the word "carcinoma."
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    Yes, breast cancer.
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    As I sat dumbstruck in my doctor's office,
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    I heard other words:
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    "cancer," "stage," "grade."
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    Until then, Cancer was the zodiac
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    sign of my friend,
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    stage was what I performed on,
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    and grades were what I got in school.
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    That day, I realized
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    I had an unwelcome, uninvited,
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    new life partner.
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    As a dancer,
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    I know the nine rasas or the navarasas:
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    anger, valor,
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    disgust, humor
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    and fear.
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    I thought I knew what fear was.
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    That day, I learned what fear was.
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    Overcome with the enormity of it all
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    and the complete feeling of loss of control,
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    I shed copious tears
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    and asked my dear husband, Jayant.
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    I said, "Is this it? Is this the end of the road?
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    Is this the end of my dance?"
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    And he, the positive soul that he is,
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    said, "No, this is just a hiatus,
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    a hiatus during the treatment,
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    and you'll get back to doing what you do best."
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    I realized then
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    that I, who thought I had complete control of my life,
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    had control of only three things:
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    My thought, my mind --
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    the images that these thoughts created --
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    and the action that derived from it.
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    So here I was wallowing
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    in a vortex of emotions
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    and depression and what have you,
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    with the enormity of the situation,
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    wanting to go to a place of healing, health and happiness.
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    I wanted to go from where I was
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    to where I wanted to be,
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    for which I needed something.
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    I needed something that would pull me out of all this.
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    So I dried my tears,
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    and I declared to the world at large ...
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    I said, "Cancer's only one page in my life,
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    and I will not allow this page to impact the rest of my life."
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    I also declared to the world at large
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    that I would ride it out,
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    and I would not allow cancer to ride me.
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    But to go from where I was
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    to where I wanted to be,
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    I needed something.
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    I needed an anchor, an image,
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    a peg
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    to peg this process on,
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    so that I could go from there.
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    And I found that in my dance,
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    my dance, my strength, my energy, my passion,
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    my very life breath.
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    But it wasn't easy.
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    Believe me, it definitely wasn't easy.
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    How do you keep cheer
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    when you go from beautiful
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    to bald in three days?
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    How do you not despair
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    when, with the body ravaged by chemotherapy,
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    climbing a mere flight of stairs was sheer torture,
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    that to someone like me who could dance for three hours?
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    How do you not get overwhelmed
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    by the despair and the misery of it all?
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    All I wanted to do was curl up and weep.
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    But I kept telling myself fear and tears
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    are options I did not have.
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    So I would drag myself into my dance studio --
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    body, mind and spirit -- every day into my dance studio,
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    and learn everything I learned
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    when I was four, all over again,
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    reworked, relearned, regrouped.
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    It was excruciatingly painful, but I did it.
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    Difficult.
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    I focused on my mudras,
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    on the imagery of my dance,
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    on the poetry and the metaphor
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    and the philosophy of the dance itself.
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    And slowly, I moved out
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    of that miserable state of mind.
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    But I needed something else.
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    I needed something to go that extra mile,
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    and I found it in that metaphor
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    which I had learned from my mother when I was four.
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    The metaphor of Mahishasura Mardhini,
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    of Durga.
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    Durga, the mother goddess, the fearless one,
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    created by the pantheon of Hindu gods.
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    Durga, resplendent, bedecked, beautiful,
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    her 18 arms
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    ready for warfare,
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    as she rode astride her lion
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    into the battlefield to destroy Mahishasur.
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    Durga, the epitome
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    of creative feminine energy,
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    or shakti.
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    Durga, the fearless one.
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    I made that image of Durga
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    and her every attribute, her every nuance,
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    my very own.
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    Powered by the symbology of a myth
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    and the passion of my training,
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    I brought laser-sharp focus into my dance,
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    laser-sharp focus to such an extent
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    that I danced a few weeks after surgery.
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    I danced through chemo and radiation cycles,
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    much to the dismay of my oncologist.
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    I danced between chemo and radiation cycles
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    and badgered him to fit it
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    to my performing dance schedule.
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    What I had done
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    is I had tuned out of cancer
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    and tuned into my dance.
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    Yes, cancer has just been one page in my life.
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    My story
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    is a story of overcoming setbacks,
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    obstacles and challenges
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    that life throws at you.
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    My story is the power of thought.
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    My story is the power of choice.
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    It's the power of focus.
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    It's the power of bringing ourselves
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    to the attention of something that so animates you,
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    so moves you,
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    that something even like cancer becomes insignificant.
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    My story is the power of a metaphor.
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    It's the power of an image.
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    Mine was that of Durga,
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    Durga the fearless one.
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    She was also called Simhanandini,
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    the one who rode the lion.
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    As I ride out,
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    as I ride my own inner strength,
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    my own inner resilience,
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    armed as I am with what medication can provide
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    and continue treatment,
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    as I ride out into the battlefield of cancer,
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    asking my rogue cells to behave,
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    I want to be known not as a cancer survivor,
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    but as a cancer conqueror.
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    I present to you an excerpt of that work
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    "Simhanandini."
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    (Applause)
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    (Music)
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    (Applause)
Title:
Fighting cancer with dance
Speaker:
Ananda Shankar Jayant
Description:

Renowned classical Indian dancer Ananda Shankar Jayant was diagnosed with cancer in 2008. She tells her personal story of not only facing the disease but dancing through it, and gives a performance revealing the metaphor of strength that helped her do it.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:46
TED edited English subtitles for Fighting cancer with dance
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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