Breathe | Teen Ink

Breathe MAG

By Anonymous

“One … two … three … NOW!” I bite down on the Altoid and a blast of ice invades my mouth and my head, the cold clearing all nervousness. The golden afternoon sun falls in sheets through the browning pine needles, making the path through the woods at the edge of the field uncomfortably warm. I stare ahead at the fifteen slicked heads, and for this moment – and the next seven minutes – they are just extensions of me.

Our instructor begins our song as we march silently onto the field. As soon as our feet hit the track, our bodies adopt the familiar performance posture: shoulders back, neck tall, head up, smiles on.

Breathe.

“You Are My Sunshine” echoes in our minds as we step onto the grass, sinking slightly but staying strong. The grass of our home field is recognizable. On it, we are confident and proud. However, this is something different altogether, and as we march along the painted white line toward our audience, we explore this new turf until it too seems like home and we no longer have to pretend to have steady, balanced steps.

The routine warm-up of the band behind us serenades us into a euphoric state with only one thought: the show. And as we focus on what we must do, improve, concentrate on, with precision we place the piles of red and gold flags in our arms in their opening sets, their colors hidden behind looming props or the unnaturally cold metal pit equipment that should be baking from sitting in the sun.

At last, we settle ourselves into the poses we have held on hot afternoons after school waiting for the daily run-throughs.

This is just one more run-through on our pavement at home. There are no judges in that box above us. It is just the director on our tower, gazing down, ready to count us off. There is no audience in the stands. Those are merely the volunteers who stand ready to doctor us up or fill our glasses with cool north Georgia water. These are not uniforms we are wearing. We are dressed in our routine black shorts and white shirts. I can even feel my dot book hanging from my hip.

I lift my gaze to the sky and focus for those few seconds between preparation and performance when all of the world seems to be holding its breath, waiting for that first golden note, and that moment freezes into an eternity. The constant drone of the gnats in the grass softens to a whisper, and the wind rustling through the plumes of the band’s hats is nature’s applause. The sunlight reflects blindingly but beautifully off the metal bleachers like a natural spotlight, illuminating everything.

I rub my gloved hands together quickly, and lick my artificially crimson lips as the judges address the band, asking us if we are ready.

We are.

The drum majors salute smartly and mount the podiums. Our breath synchronizes, and our hearts beat together. We are one being.

Then hands start moving, and at last, like a breath of life, the first chord rings out and I move. It seems like time stops as I flow from one movement to the next. Flags loft into the air in unison, and a catch of breath and a catch in time jerk my heart before the pole is back in my hands. Once again I am a river, flowing toward a goal of crisp winds and blue skies I have only imagined, and a salty victory that I have not yet tasted.

There’s a moment to breathe quickly between songs before we go on. From pink of heart and speech to gold of God and red of terror, the colors flash like individual spirits, entwined with us like lovers as we move together.

We are visual representations of our musical counterparts. As I dive, the trumpet line soars. As I stretch, the flutes lift into a heavenly cadence. And as I toss, the band goes silent, so that my flag itself is the instrument, and the snap-crack of the release seems like the explosion of the drum line. There is an electric connection between the guard and the band, and as I perform, I do so not for the audience or even for myself, I perform for my friends – an intimacy between those who share everything. I share a glance and a smile with my friends as I run past, my silk brushing their ankles, and I feel complete.

With a final resonating brass blast, it is over. Time comes screeching into park as we hold the last position, breathing hard. My arms now began to ache with the strain of the last seven minutes. I steal a glance behind the towering prop beside me, and see my friend of years gazing back, smiling, and suddenly, it does not matter that I haven’t taken a single remembered breath or that I may have made a mistake. I performed – for them.

I take a slow deep breath, close my eyes, and lift my head higher than seems possible. And even though my vision is short-sighted and my heavy makeup is dripping from my face in maroon and gold trails, suddenly everything is clear. I can see, even with my eyes closed, every member of the band and every person in the audience and every judge in the box high above me, and we are all as one.

I open my eyes and smile.

Barely audible, I breathe into the applause-filled air of that October afternoon: “I was perfect.”

“We were perfect,” the world breathes back.



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This article has 50 comments.


on Sep. 30 2013 at 2:19 pm
GreatDaneLover, South Bend, Indiana
0 articles 2 photos 15 comments
This is really cool.  Keep up the good work!

on Oct. 20 2012 at 9:02 pm
TerraCotta GOLD, Cupertino, California
17 articles 0 photos 14 comments

Favorite Quote:
“A man, who has no conscience, no goodness, does not suffer.”

Finely constructed. Very nicely done!   Please check out my work as well.

AriShine GOLD said...
on Jun. 10 2012 at 10:11 am
AriShine GOLD, Norcross, Georgia
13 articles 0 photos 130 comments

Favorite Quote:
"Whatever you are, be a good one." -Abraham Lincoln

I love the emotion in this. I am not in a band or anything, but I really got the feeling you were trying to convey. Keep writing!

on May. 20 2012 at 10:38 am
Aeliss-Novak-the-Zombie-Space-Pirate BRONZE, That Place With All The Trees And Stuff, Oregon
1 article 3 photos 150 comments

Favorite Quote:
Impossible is not a word, just a reason not to try.~Kutless

I'm going to smile and make you think I'm happy, I'm going to laugh, so you don't see me cry, I'm going to let you go in style, and even if it kills me - I'm going to smile.~Anonymous

I love the desciptions. And the last sentence "We were perfect," the world breathes back.

 

Beautiful. :)


on Oct. 26 2011 at 5:22 pm
Rosie_1030 BRONZE, Windber, Pennsylvania
1 article 0 photos 2 comments

Favorite Quote:
You can tell someone there are 300 billion stars in the universe and they will believe you, but tell them there is wet paint on a bench, and they will have to touch it to be sure. ~ Unknown

I'm in colorguard myself, and this piece of writing perfectly desribes the hard work and emotion that goes into a peformance. I loved it!! :D

on Aug. 7 2011 at 4:08 pm
VioletsandVoice, Spiritwood, North Dakota
0 articles 0 photos 170 comments
amazing job! very good description, it brought back memories of what it feels like for me to be standing in front of a crowd the instant before I perform, 5 stars :)

on Jul. 1 2011 at 6:28 pm
Tink1350 BRONZE, Medford, New York
4 articles 0 photos 104 comments

Favorite Quote:
"Worries are like weights and weights keep you down, so let go of your worries and fly,"

this was very descriptive, but i had a hard time getting through all the thik detail. remember to not over do it with all the detail.

on Jun. 24 2011 at 11:49 pm
Allis-in-Wonderland PLATINUM, Cartersville, Georgia
38 articles 1 photo 63 comments

Favorite Quote:
"Sometimes people leave you...halfway through The Wood. Do not let it grieve you...No one leaves for good. You are not alone, for no one is alone." -Into The Woods

I'm from cartersville, GA! This piece was great, very descriptive. Great job!

on Mar. 22 2011 at 7:58 pm
remembermeplz PLATINUM, Friend, Nebraska
36 articles 10 photos 230 comments

Favorite Quote:
"when the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace" -- Jimi Hendrix

reading this makes me want to be in the colorguard!

amazing writing


on Feb. 12 2011 at 11:25 pm
RuRu2013 BRONZE, Cleburne, Texas
3 articles 0 photos 1 comment

Favorite Quote:
Situations are irrelevant now.

I myself am in colorguard, and I personally think flag is the easiest part of the whole show. . . It's like a nice break. Though you captured the nervousness well, do you not spin weapon? The most nerve wracking part of the show?

....... said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:02 pm
i have a realy good friend who does color gaurd. when i was in middle school i used to thik it was realy weird to be a band membmer or a flag girl even. i never realy thought of how much people actuly like having a bad and flag girls! i think it is great that u truly have the personality to stick to something u like to do even when it not a persented sport

on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:01 pm
you sound like you are very good at color gaurd

Cstouder24 said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:01 pm
You have some killer writing skills.  I am not in the color guard or band of any type but after reading this it gave me a lot of descriptiviness on the colorguard.  Great job!

Trevyy B said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:01 pm
Well written and desriptive. your words flow real nice and you have a great talent. it was very good!

aao2 said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:01 pm

I can picture exactly what your talking about. 

great job. 


ccc3 said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:00 pm

Thanks for sharing this experience for us I am not a color guard or I am not a band member.

 


mullins2013 said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:00 pm
You are so right. We all work so hard in marching band. We do more than what some people think.

Moo-Oink said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:00 pm
That was a nicely written article, I'm in band, and there is a lot of work that gets put into concerts and games.

cara blane said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:00 pm
I really like this story because tt really speakes to me.  It shows how much the people who are in color guard and band really care and have fun with what their doing.  Keep writing!!!!

!GoColts!123 said...
on Sep. 20 2010 at 2:00 pm
This was really well written. I'm not in either band or color guard, but I have friends who are, and this sounds like it has summed up everything it is for them. We all get that feeling before any kind of competition, and it's great that you took the time to put it into words.