The present tense of a dance performance is a dialogue between the past and the future. Living in the vortex of global events and their consequences, one can see how two extremes collide - people's historical memory and the desire to cancel the past and create everything anew. Beliefs formed in the past, imposed foreign traditions take root in the memory of generations, so in public space and even in one's immediate environment, one can notice the legacy of the occupation thought, nostalgia for the period when everything was "equal". On the other hand, as the cancellation culture (English Cancel culture) becomes more and more prevalent, it encourages us to give up our identity, which was formed in the wrong conditions in the past, and raised us as we are today. In this way, family members, neighbors or citizens of the same state move towards separation and even confrontation: as if a boundary between two rivals - the past and the future - where different truths, values and goals exist, emerges in the game.
Is it possible to win the game of seeing the untruth in your truth? Or maybe the answer lies not in combat, but in dialogue? We know only one thing - such a move will definitely require courage! "Truth-Dare" is a well-known game that everyone is invited to play. The rules of this game are simple: dare you defy the rules of the game-mode or let someone else decide for you what is your truth? But does courage always equal truth? Or maybe truth >< courage? We are all pieces in this global game, constantly moving around the space like a game board in order to be on the right side at the end of our game.