During an allemande,  dancers should think of  their arn as a
spring--neither the elbow nor is rigid.    Without instruction,  most
beginners will keep one or both rigid
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 7:39 PM Read Weaver via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  I quite like Alan’s tetherball pole, something I’ll
keep in mind.
 I’ve so rarely found anyone giving too much weight that I’ve thought the
 objections to the term were theoretical rather than practical, but perhaps
 I’ve been lucky (or give too much weight myself). It has occurred to me
 that “taking weight” is perhaps a better term, since that better suggests
 something you’re offering rather than demanding.
 When I teach beginners, the very first thing I do is teach giving weight,
 both because I think it’s so important, and because I then point out
 moments where you can do it in all* the other figures. For example, in a
 chain across, I describe the connection that the people crossing have as
 they take hands and pull past as giving weight, awa a very different giving
 weight in a well-done courtesy turn. I think calling all of that “giving
 weight” is a way of getting across that it’s not just one thing, and that
 it’s really central to the difference between dancing near others and
 dancing with others. And I’ll tell beginners that if they’re good at giving
 weight, they can make lots of mistakes and people will think it’s their own
 fault ‘cause they’ll assume from the good giving weight that they’re
 dancing with a skilled dancer.
 *Except wrist-grip star—possible to do it, and if you do you’ll hurt the
 person whose wrist you’re gripping.
 The trick I start with for learning it is to have folks in allemande
 position, and then have them go around really fast while paying close
 attention to what that feels like in their hand and arm. I’ll then have
 them do it again, starting out fast and then slowing down (maybe slower
 than you’d actually dance it) while keeping that same feeling in their hand
 and arm.
 But the original question was about _improving_ skills—the specific thing
 for that would be giving weight in a circle, something that so rarely
 happens. In my beginners’ classes, I point out that a circle four is a
 really boring figure, _unless_ everyone is giving weight; then it’s
 actually a pretty worthwhile figure. (It’s why grapevine step has inveigled
 it’s way from club squares—it adds something at least a little interesting
 to a (weightless, poorly done) circle four. I strongly discourage it, since
 it’s so much harder (albeit not impossible) to give steady weight while
 grapevining.)
 Read Weaver
 Jamaica Plain, MA
 
http://lcfd.org
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