Connected
57Stating connected
Have you ever watched YouTube videos on the internet while connected with another person by phone? It's hysterically funny and kind of comfortable and really interesting all at the same time.
Picture this: I'm sitting on the bed, clacking away on my computer, dressed in my rattiest, most comfortable old tie died fleece robe with airconditioning vents (aka holes) in interesting places. I remembered to call my cousin about a new operating system I'd seen the day before that's still in beta testing. She's into that. I called and she immediately told me about the Susan Boyle video on YouTube. I hadn't seen it so I pulled it up while we were chatting and watched it. Yes, I multi-tasked. I can do that because I'm female and I have ADHD.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lp0IWv8QZY
I won't add it again here, I'm sure anyone who wants to see it has. I was totally blown away by it. I sat here with tears rolling down my face and silently cheered her on. It's so cool to see some one like her, like me, come out and totally blow the audience out of their seats, literally forcing them to give her a standing O just by virue of her talent alone, and making them look beyond her exterior to see her soul and all the beauty in it.
Stavros Flatley
Stavros Flatley
When that video finished, I was idly scrolling down and saw the video for Stavros Flatley. As you can see from the picture, it's very strange, but looks compellingly like a shot from Lord of the Dance. I've long been a fan of that and of RiverDance and I knew the main dancer's name was Michael Flatley, so I just had to check it out.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gHvATmUsSg
I almost hurt myself laughing so hard. My cousin wanted to know what I was watching since she could hear the music over the phone, so I told her where to find the video and she went there. By then, I was ready to watch it again so we both clicked on it and just bawled with laughter. She's a fan of Irish dancing too, but she'd never seen Flatley dance it, so I looked up the vid and told her where to find it. We even got synchronized on that one, so we had stereo sound.
Lord of the Dance
Irish Dancing
We spent the next 3 1/2 hours watching clips and videos from Riverdance and Lord of the Dance, then just wandered to what caught our eyes. In the clip below, we watched 32 pairs of feet in perfect unison, slapping the floor, making the percussion for some of the most stirring celtic music. We both marveled at the timing and athleticism of the dancers, and their grace and beauty as the moved across the stage. Some of them have hang time during their jumps that would make an NBA star pea green with envy! Jean Butler, in particular, seems to just float across the stage during her performances, light as air and flowing like the river.
Riverdancing
Connected, just not physically
The grand thing about this was that we were able to talk and comment on the same videos, without either of us having to leave our comfort zones. My knees have issues with stairs, she lives on a 3rd floor walk up. She lives across town from me.
I was folding laundry, she was doing dishes. We both had things to take care of, but we managed to connect and have a real ball while taking care of what we needed to. We spent an afternoon together, strengthening a familial bond and a friendship, while still being able to take care of some of those pesky home chores that never seem to get done.
It wasn't an earth shaking day, but it was one I'll add to my memory box and replay on a regular basis. Sometimes, memories like this can help during those coldest hours of the night when I feel like the only person on earth who's awake, when the pain is overwhelming and I just can't get to sleep. Memories like this are the warm quilts that convince me that I'm not alone in the world, that family, especially family of the heart, is a vital part of my world.
Irish Dancing in the News
- HILLSBOROUGH: Irish dancers skip their way to national eventHillsborough Beacon32 hours ago
With several wins in both solo and team dances, Hillsboroughâs Davis Academy of Irish Dance took home top prizes during the annual Eastern Regional Oireachtas dance championships, which were held Thanksgiving weekend at the Philadelphia Marriott with competitors from New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
- Oscar Wildeâs Sly Ernest Charms in Modest Musical: John SimonBloomberg10 hours ago
Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) -- New York’s Irish Repertory Theatre revives “Ernest in Love,” an innocuous little 1960 musical based on Oscar Wilde ’s “The Importance of Being Earnest.” The show loses as much as it gains from that illustrious pedigree.
- Diary: Richard Dunwoody to lead the wayDaily Telegraph20 hours ago
Richard Dunwoody, in his own brand of dancing, will lead off at the Ledbury Hunt Ball.
- Irish dancers to perform on WGBH's 'Christmas Celtic Sojourn'Norton Mirror5 days ago
Some local parents’ best Christmas presents this year will come in the form of their dancing children. When the 9 to 12 year-olds dance on one of Boston’s most well-known stages, there is no better way to describe them than “sparkling Christmas presents,” said Liam Harney of Harney Academy of Irish Step Dancing.
- Jackson, Cronkite among arts world deaths in 2009Boston Globe15 hours ago
It was only a rehearsal, and he was twice the age of the dancers accompanying him. But the video doesn't lie: Michael Jackson was looking ahead to a smash opening in London -- and giving it his all.
- Gay activist attacked at Jax Hts bar: CopsYourNabe.com7 hours ago
Police were investigating the alleged assault of a gay rights activist at a Jackson Heights bar earlier this month as a hate crime, although no arrests had been made in the incident.
- Farewell: Nobel winner, King of Pop left us in '09Seattle Times16 hours ago
Of all the notables who died in 2009, the one who most changed the world could have walked down any Main Street USA without causing a stir.
- Final farewell: Nobel winner Borlaug, Kennedy, King of Pop among the notables who died in 2009Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune16 hours ago
Of all the notables who died in 2009, the one who most changed the world could have walked down any Main Street USA without causing a stir. Scientist Norman Borlaug, who died Sept. 12 at age 95, developed crops that enabled Third World farmers to wrest more food from their land.
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Comments
Don't sweat it CC, you have a family of the heart - the best kind, the kind you can pick, not the ones you have to put up with because they were born into the same genetic family.
I don't have much, if anything, in common with my birth family. They're all white sheep and I'm tie died. That's okay, I've got faily of the heart, just like you do.
What a lovely hub. We can connect with people we wouldn't otherwise see and your choice of videos was great -- the Greek Flatley father/son combo had me laughing so hard the cat woke up. I hadn't seen Susan Boyle, so thanks for the link. (Yeah, I admit it, she had me crying, too.)
You are so accurate, Silver Freak in stating that we can choose our "family of the heart." Sounds like this memory will be a good and lasting one for you. Enjoy!
Hi Silver! I never heard of Susan Boyle before last weekend, when I read another hub about her by franciaonline (a very recommendable article, btw). Now I'm in Ireland and I can't stop hearing about the woman, everyone seems mesmerized with her around here!
Anyhow, very warm hub, one to remeber in the coldest hours indeed.
What a novel idea, SF! And yes, Susan Boyle *is* a treasure!
As for the 'family of the heart' thing, I was born in between generations. Most of my first cousins were way older, only the "surprise babies" were my age (and there weren't many), so I got along best with second cousins. There's one who absolutely makes me crazy sometimes...well, most of the time...but whom I'd put my life on the line for (and have on several occasions). It's a given we'll meet again in the next life, too.
What a great way to spend an afternoon, listening to music together with friends and family, whether they are near or far.
Wow! You've all just warmed the cockles of my shrivelled old heart! LOL!
Seriously, thanks you guys.
Teresa, I did that too, woke the cat, then she crawled up in my lap and wanted attention. She stayed there as long as I was playing Irish dance music, but as soon as I changed to something else. she went away. did the same thing the next time I had on a CD if Irish music. Her name is scrapper, so maybe, in some life, she was Irish. It would explain a lot!
Peggy, TY, it was and I will.
TY Elena, it is one I'm going to keep alive as long as I can.
JG, I know your cousin feels the same way about you. I'm one of those intergenerationals who has more in common with the 2nds than the firsts too. I have some that I adore and will put up with any amount of crap from, just because we mean so much aand have shared so much history with. Thanks for the wonderful comment! One lifetime just isn't enough for some relationships, is it.
Hawk, It was great, and I got to do it all in my jammies too! Best days.















C. C. Riter says:
8 months ago
It's great to have family like that. I don't wnymore. I have my Wee One and she fills in for me as well as all my new hubber freinds, like you. xxx