What Louise said!!! Thank you.
If I may, I'd like to share this with my home, very traditional, dance.
Mary
On Tue, Mar 12, 2024, 7:51 AM Louise Siddons via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Colin wrote:
I wasn't going to get involved in all this, but I have to side with Ken
Panton - I'm a man and I certainly prefer
dancing with women. And I very much enjoy dancing with Louise Siddons
even though she may generally have a different preference.
It always surprises me when people bring sexuality into this conversation,
even though at this point I should know better. I enjoy dancing with Colin,
just as I enjoy dancing with anyone who is a good dancer (or making a
good-faith effort, or having a tonne of fun) and an interesting, kind,
thoughtful human being, and I am pleased that we are friends both on and
off the dance floor. When he (or anyone) asks me to dance, my first thought
is not “oh good, I'm sexually attracted to this person” — it’s “oh good,
this will be fun!”
Recently at a contra dance I was separated from my partner, a woman, by
two men who didn’t want to dance with each other and perceived my partner
and I as acceptable alternatives. I was visibly upset by it and declined to
dance at all; I am not a commodity). One of the men came over afterwards to
apologise (as did my partner; older than me and not in her home community,
I think she felt more social pressure to accede). He explained that he knew
how I felt because he “has a daughter like you” — meaning, lesbian. I
explained back to him that I wasn’t upset because I’m a lesbian, I was
upset because I had asked someone to dance, they had accepted, and that
agreement had been disregarded in deference to two men’s discomfort. To be
honest, I am squicked out by the idea that someone looks at me dancing with
another person and thinks first of my sexuality — that’s a creepy worldview
in the context of contra dancing.
There are dance communities determined to hold onto a heterocentric model,
and that’s their choice — but we are, as a society, attempting to heal from
a long — but ultimately quite recent — history of toxic gender models and
so I think it’s a bad choice. Men being afraid or disgusted to touch other
men is a social illness, not something to preserve or protect. Based on
people’s comments in this discussion, gender-free dance communities
understand, consciously or otherwise, that contra dance is a collective
enterprise, that we are all dancing with each other, and that the community
is healthier when it doesn’t put limits around how that happens. Friends
can dance with each other — yes, even if they’re men! — and family members,
and strangers, and lovers can all dance with each other, and they can bring
different aspects of themselves to every interaction within the dance,
whether with partner or neighbour.
Louise.
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