*Never pair wine with circus, unless of course you're in the audience
My fiancé Amanda and I have been on this wine kick recently. I never was a wine drinker before but we’ve taken to making fancy dinners and pairing them with cheap but tasty wine. I can’t offer you any advice on wine pairings (that’s not my specialty) but I can offer you advice on something I know a little about- class pairings. I’ll try to keep it to classes we actually offer at Circus Sanctuary but no matter where you are it can give you a good idea of what classes you want to pair together to get the most out of your training. Inversions and Beginning Contortion- This is a dream team. It’s a little counter intuitive but one of the biggest factors in getting a handstand is flexibility. Pike flexibility is huge as are straddles, shoulders and middle splits. You’ll get the most benefit to your inversions if you take a class that incorporates active flex. And if you dream of being a hand balancing contortionist *swoon* this makes all the sense. Pole and Silks This is the combination I started with. It builds a lot of strength pretty quickly and the moves are similar enough that you’ll have a lot of Aha! moments with skills. There’s enough differences between the two to make it interesting but it trains the body and its pathways so you’ll see a lot of progress. Vertical and Bar Mixing it up with aerial classes is a great way to go. Vertical Apparatus like pole, silks, rope, and straps are great for building strength and developing your aerial know how. Having to wrap yourself and hold yourself up can make things a little more complicated but it can be super rewarding. Bar apparatus such as Trapeze or Lyra are great because it’s easier to focus on the shapes you’re making, as well as the technique and the flow of your movement. Having both can lay a good foundation and as you get more advanced they can start to blend and borrow from one another to make some pretty unique stuff. Conditioning and/or Flexibility with Anything It is all about balance with this one. With any circus class you take you can clean it up and quite possibly avoid injury by taking care of and balancing out the body. Generally I think it’s good advice to take an honest look at yourself (if you don’t know have a coach do it) and determine where you need to see the most improvement- in strength or flexibility. Ironically the thing you’re most attracted to is often the thing you’re better at so don’t pick this one according to taste. More of the same Repetition. Repetition. Repetition. If you want to get good at something do it a lot. That’s pretty obvious but it’s easy to get distracted by shiny new classes and to skip out on Open Studios. I love to dabble in all the things but consider focusing for awhile on one thing. I see the most progress in a single discipline when I do it 3+ times a week. That can mean taking the same group class a couple times a week or it can mean adding in private lessons or just showing up for Open Studios and practicing what you’ve learned. You can also take the problem solving approach when picking classes to support your main endeavor. If you’re having trouble with lines try flexibility or ballet. If hollow body is supper hard and you’re floppy in all your tricks take conditioning or acrobatics. If getting your hips over your head is a struggle in aerial class, inversions could help you out. You get the idea. There are so many winning combinations in circus. Think about what you want to get out of it and let inspiration guide you. You really can’t go wrong. Just listen to your body and listen to your heart and get your butt in the studio. Keep Climbing! Kelsey Erickson, Circus Sanctuary
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I have no idea that wines sometimes are complicated. I know now that is having a high maintenance that is why some people tend to make it as a business because even though it is a high maintenance, it is worth the money in time. I am also not a wine fan but I guess those who really appreciates wine has a different perspective with normal people like me. That makes me curious and makes me want to study it now.
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AuthorKelsey Erickson is a Circus Performer, Instructor, and Studio owner. She lives and works in Tucson, AZ. Archives
May 2020
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