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“As in the tradition of many Chinese families, my family hid my grandfather’s sickness from him when they found out about his late-stage cancer diagnosis,” Zhou explains to IGNANT. Shortly after her grandfather passed away, she performed the “Dying Swan,” a classical ballet solo in which the dancer portrays a swan as it nears the end of its life. In the solo, the swan does not realize it’s dying, and therefore continues to struggle living until the end. With this, Zhou experienced a powerful resonance with her grandfather, who died six months after his diagnosis, not knowing what was happening to him or why he was in so much pain. “When I performed ‘The Dying Swan’, I was so powerfully moved,” Zhou says. “To have the opportunity to feel at that moment on stage, that I was merely a vehicle to tell this story, not just of the swan, but of my grandfather and of all life that one day will pass. In this journey of grief, submission, and acceptance, I was incredibly humbled.”
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