PT. 1This story is hard to tell. Funny thing, one would think that true stories tell themselves. And I guess they do, but some are just more difficult stories and harder to get out. This story happened last Friday night, October 9, 2009. For the record. The evening was destined to dancing. For anyone who knows me this drive to dance in me is strong. For better or worse, I dance. For richer or poorer, I dance. I dance, yes I do. This has driven me all over the world to find the dance. Asia, Europe, and North America, have been danced on by my little legs. How I got there is a story for another day. Dance for me, is how I set my spirit free. It is how I connect with the world outside. 360 degrees of motion, so many possibilities. It has contained the violence, and allows the world to see the essence of me.
In Walla Walla, WA, the choices for dancers are very slim. One hip-hop dance club, that is it. No other choices. It is a typical box-top hip-hop, booty dancing, hook-up club. That is the major reason that I started DJing and throwing dance parties. I got tired of having to drive to San Francisco, Seattle or Portland to let spirit go. Be the change you want to see in the world, according to Gandhi. This means dance if there are no dancers. Provide the house music, if there is no house music. Throw down with the breakbeats, if there are no break dancers. If I can't stand the dance scene available to me, make a new one. This actually has worked out very well for me, evolving so many dance parties that have been so much fun. All with the music that makes me get down; house, breaks, electro, and dub-step. However, in the dance performance business, less is more. Which means, most weekends I don't throw a party. Where do I dance then? You know it. Where all that booty poppin' is going on.
Learning to love the dance, no matter what, has been the consequence of all this. Once I realized that dancing as a mating ritual is the oldest form of dance we know, I became free indeed. I stopped the hating, not just of those kind of dancers, but everyone who is not like me. I no longer dis' on those who do the mating dances. I admire them, based on their skill. I respect them, based on their humanity. I dance with them, because I can dance. What I do not do, is mate with them. I might pretend for a minute, to prove my hip-hop skills and not be rude. I can go low, so very low. My burning man friends call it my two-foot box. All with a girl or three, trying to press up against me. Keep moving, step and turn, step and turn, go low, back up, spin again. What I am trying not to do is hit that booty, bump, bump, bump. Watch. You will see. No contact is how I dance free.
Which brings me to the heart of my story. The troubling, ponderous heart. The part that stares out the window as my writing slows. You see, now I share the truama that happened to me. I did not get stabbed and neither did he. It was late, the dance club had closed. I had a dance with destiny, waiting to unfold. My friday night had gone well. The DJ had played a couple of seriously beat dropping songs, allowing me to get my break on. Dripping with sweat, that's how I know. I came to work my body. No matter what others are doing. I am here for me.
Floating out of that space, I moved on. Walking home was a joy. First, I thought, I will stop at the gas station and get a candy bar and some soda. A little sugar sounded good. As I neared the stop my first clue that the winds were shifting was the screaming and yelling drifting out to me. I looked closer and saw a melee of people mashing around the front door. Clearly a fight had broken out. By the time I got there, two main actors were revealed. Both African-Americans. Only one had a bloody face and the other didn't. Faced off now, they were yelling insults and moving in to get it on. That is when I jump in. Of course. This is where my trauma begins. I need to take a breather. I will finish this later.
PT. 2Ok. I continue. Violence creates trauma. This sounds so obvious. After a violent event, however, it is often difficult to isolate and identify the trauma from that moment. Memories blur rapidly. We hold on to what we feel, but why we feel that way is often lost. True violent actors move in this space of trauma and rapidly do more, if allowed. Why I act is because I can and most cannot. Frozen, watching the two men. Waiting for the next round. Which is certain to be on the ground, pounding into the cement. At this moment, I dance in. Sending my voice first. "Heyaaa!! SToppp!! Stopppp!" Using my Marine Corps command voice, I shout. Just remembering this is making my heart race. It is not just the coffee. Bounding in between them now, I dance around. Attention now shifts to me. Everyone is confused. Who is this guy? "Just STopp!" "Enough!" They break attention from one another. The injured one is protesting. The aggressor is threatening. I have done this so many times, stopped fights, that I have some idea about how it works. I am seeking to create space, with my voice, from the moment. I am also trying to keep my space from the actors so they can't reach me, if possible. I will interfere in between them if they are already fighting, but in this case I did not have to. They stopped.
Sorting the circle out. The primary actor moved to the other side. Back with his boys. There were five of them, all African American. I am sure they are thinking, "Who is this white guy?" What they don't know, is I am not all white. My grandmother on my dad's side was full blooded Caddo Indian. I also am enrolled in my tribe. Participating in Native culture most of life has informed my outlook significantly. In this moment I was able to create identity with these guys, even if they did not. I feel it, the oppression of the larger culture. I feel the power of the circle. I also feel my strength as a warrior and dancer. I know what I am doing in this place. That is an inevitable gravity in my life. Sucking me in to these violent circles.
Now the girls are screaming at me, "Who the f... are? What the f... are you doing? Get the f... outta here! Let 'em go! You #$$%%!!!" I said, "I am being a grown up. Get back in your car!! Just leave it alone!!" She gets back in, screaming at me the whole time. I am trying to get the injured one in with her, they are obviously friends, but it is not working. He is still calling out to the other guys. "Fight fair!" "Come on! Man on Man!" I am trying to water him down. "No ones going to fight here! Enouugh!" At this point, one of the other brothers runs over, pulls off his shirt and yells, "Awright Nigga! Lets Go! Let's Do It!" I turn, dancing higher, step, side step, back step, side step, dancing on, "NO ONES Gonna Do It!" "Go back to your car! He goes back. I suddenly feel a car pushing up against me, trying to drive me out of the way. I turn. It is the girl again. I look her in the eye. Shake my finger at her. "What do you think you are doing? Enough! Just back up!!" I don't move. I will not be distracted, or this fight is going over the top. It is like managing five boiling pots. I look back. Now a fourth one and the injured guy are getting to it. I run over. "Stop!!" They do. Things recede for a moment. The injured one, however, will not shut up. Yelling out at the five, he continues to keep the moment on fire. I turn from him, just in time to see the original actor rushing out of the car at us.
Things slow down in those awful moments. Everything became surreal, the moment I saw his face, enraged and hardened, and then I saw the bright shiny thing in his hand, he had a knife! All these thoughts rush in that long moment of reality. Why am I here? Am I really getting in between a knife and the guy the knife wants to stab? Picture thoughts of my daughter are in my mind. What am I doing? He is bum rushing us with a knife. I know he just wants to shut that guy up. I sweep him behind me, commanding,"Shut up! He's got a knife!" Dancing higher! I am bouncing two to three feet in the air now. Side step, side step, back step, side, side, back step. Eyes never leaving the knife, bright in his hand. I am committed, he will not stab this guy if I can help it. I feel the injured one, holding on to me, while hiding behind me. I am now using every command tone I know strong enough to go over the moment, but trying to keep it just right so he doesn't go after me. "StoP with that noise!" "PUt that noise AwaY! StoP! Stop! Stop!" Nobody needs that noise!" "Enough with that NOISE!" Dancing between him and his object of hatred was truly frightening, I remember those feelings. At the moment, however, they have to be ignored! This is what break dancing is all about. Pop and lock! Slide step, legs forward, torso back! Let's dance.
He finally stops. Looking at us. "Just get back in the car. The cops are going to be here in minute. Just leave." I say. Jedi mind trickery. That is what I do. Pretend to be the fool, the drunken master, stagger, side step, back step, jump up and down. These are my tools, dancing down the street. He goes back to the car and gets in, they are all loaded up ready to go. I know it is almost over. I start lecturing, "Really, again and again. Why must we do this. It's always like this!" I am yelling now. Truly upset at having my life threatened. "Brother on Brother! Again and again! Over and Over. Seriously! Are you kidding me! One more time?" I feel in that moment that I am channeling the black mother, who is so tired this noise, the black preacher who is preaching to empty chairs. I am talking of the reality that in communities of color, it is brother on brother. That is where most of the real violence occurs. In streets and bars all over America. The true consequence of racism is horizontal violence. They are not listening. One of them hears me though, the one guy who never got into it. He shouts back, before jumping in the car, "I don't even know you man!" "I know!" I yell back,"But you know I am right!" Just like that it is over.
Except for me. I had my life threatened. That is real. It was not a joke. Life does flash before your eyes in those moments. I just remember my daughter's face in my mind. I want to cry. I am so upset. I am also angry. Why must it be this way? Why must it be me? As a good friend said later, when I called to debrief, "If not you Larry? Then who? No else could do that in that moment." I say without ego, that is true. I say with great sadness, that is true. The skills I have, I earned the hard way. I have had my violent times. Even in war, however, I never had to face a knife fight. I was traumatized by that knife fight. No doubt about it. Having friends to help me debrief is so important. Having an artistic process is the key. Mostly though, being mindful of the reality of trauma is the work. I do struggle with PTSD already, from the killing fields of Kuwait that I participated in as a US Marine in 1991. Fortunately, I am well into my work. I have suffered great losses already and have learned how to cope. Hence, why I dance....and also, how I stopped a stabbing that night. Because I can and I will. Two different things they are, indeed.