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Martha Graham - All that is important is this one moment in movement. Make the moment vital and worth living. Do not let it slip away unnoticed and unused

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Manage episode 507479772 series 3545617
Content provided by Andrew McGivern. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew McGivern or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Welcome to the Daily Quote – a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, for September 20th.Today is National Dance Day, a celebration that recognizes one of humanity's most universal forms of expression. Established in 2010 by Nigel Lythgoe, the creator of "So You Think You Can Dance," this holiday encourages people of all ages and abilities to get moving and experience the joy of dance.What makes National Dance Day special is that it's not about perfect technique or professional training. It's about celebrating dance as a fundamental human impulse – something we do when we're happy, when music moves us, or when we simply need to express what words cannot capture.From ancient tribal ceremonies to modern flash mobs, from ballroom elegance to hip-hop innovation, dance transcends cultural boundaries and speaks a language everyone understands. It's one of the few activities that simultaneously engages our body, mind, and spirit, creating a unique form of human expression that's both deeply personal and universally shared.Today's quote comes from Martha Graham, legendary modern dance pioneer, who said:"All that is important is this one moment in movement. Make the moment vital and worth living. Do not let it slip away unnoticed and unused."Graham's words capture the essence of what makes dance so powerful and what National Dance Day celebrates. Dance exists entirely in the present moment – you can't dance yesterday's dance or tomorrow's dance. You can only dance now, with the body you have, in the space you're in, with whatever music is playing.This is what makes dance both terrifying and liberating. There's nowhere to hide in movement – no editing, no revision, no do-overs in real time. Every gesture, every step, every moment of expression happens and then it's gone, replaced by the next moment of possibility.Graham understood that this temporary nature isn't dance's weakness – it's its strength. Because dance can't be preserved in its pure form, each moment of movement becomes precious. Every time we dance, we're creating something that will never exist again in exactly the same way.This applies whether you're performing on stage or dancing alone in your kitchen. The moment you allow your body to respond to rhythm, you're participating in something vital and alive, something that makes that moment worth living.As you head into your Friday, consider Martha Graham's wisdom about making each moment vital and worth living. You don't need to literally dance today – though if you feel moved to, please do – but you can embrace the dancer's mindset of being fully present in your movements and actions.What would change if you approached just one activity today with the same presence and intention a dancer brings to movement? Maybe it's walking to a meeting with awareness of each step. Maybe it's cooking dinner with attention to the rhythm of chopping and stirring. Maybe it's simply moving through your day with more consciousness and less autopilot.Dance reminds us that our bodies are not just vehicles for carrying our brains around – they're instruments of expression, connection, and joy.

  continue reading

580 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 507479772 series 3545617
Content provided by Andrew McGivern. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew McGivern or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Welcome to the Daily Quote – a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, for September 20th.Today is National Dance Day, a celebration that recognizes one of humanity's most universal forms of expression. Established in 2010 by Nigel Lythgoe, the creator of "So You Think You Can Dance," this holiday encourages people of all ages and abilities to get moving and experience the joy of dance.What makes National Dance Day special is that it's not about perfect technique or professional training. It's about celebrating dance as a fundamental human impulse – something we do when we're happy, when music moves us, or when we simply need to express what words cannot capture.From ancient tribal ceremonies to modern flash mobs, from ballroom elegance to hip-hop innovation, dance transcends cultural boundaries and speaks a language everyone understands. It's one of the few activities that simultaneously engages our body, mind, and spirit, creating a unique form of human expression that's both deeply personal and universally shared.Today's quote comes from Martha Graham, legendary modern dance pioneer, who said:"All that is important is this one moment in movement. Make the moment vital and worth living. Do not let it slip away unnoticed and unused."Graham's words capture the essence of what makes dance so powerful and what National Dance Day celebrates. Dance exists entirely in the present moment – you can't dance yesterday's dance or tomorrow's dance. You can only dance now, with the body you have, in the space you're in, with whatever music is playing.This is what makes dance both terrifying and liberating. There's nowhere to hide in movement – no editing, no revision, no do-overs in real time. Every gesture, every step, every moment of expression happens and then it's gone, replaced by the next moment of possibility.Graham understood that this temporary nature isn't dance's weakness – it's its strength. Because dance can't be preserved in its pure form, each moment of movement becomes precious. Every time we dance, we're creating something that will never exist again in exactly the same way.This applies whether you're performing on stage or dancing alone in your kitchen. The moment you allow your body to respond to rhythm, you're participating in something vital and alive, something that makes that moment worth living.As you head into your Friday, consider Martha Graham's wisdom about making each moment vital and worth living. You don't need to literally dance today – though if you feel moved to, please do – but you can embrace the dancer's mindset of being fully present in your movements and actions.What would change if you approached just one activity today with the same presence and intention a dancer brings to movement? Maybe it's walking to a meeting with awareness of each step. Maybe it's cooking dinner with attention to the rhythm of chopping and stirring. Maybe it's simply moving through your day with more consciousness and less autopilot.Dance reminds us that our bodies are not just vehicles for carrying our brains around – they're instruments of expression, connection, and joy.

  continue reading

580 episodes

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