Becky Liddle via Callers wrote:
What was helpful to me to begin to feel/notice flow
were comments from the caller during the walk-thru that primed me to pay attention to
flow: things like “when we dance this to music, you’ll notice that your momentum from the
___ move carries you right into the ___ move, so you naturally know which direction to
move." ...
When a caller wants to make the sort of comment Becky os suggesting, I think it's
generally best to do it as close as practical to the moment when dancers are walking
through the figure or transition the caller under discussion. FOr one thing it's
likely to be easier for people to picture thr action that they're doing or that they
just did than it is to remember something from several moves ago or to imagine some
verbally-described future action starting from some future position. For another thing,
some dancers seem to have a strong tendency to tune out as soon as they sense that a
caller is talking in declarative sentences about a past or future situation rather than
imperative sentences about what to do right now. And sentences of the form "When you
get to the part where blah-blah-blah, remember that blah-blah-blah", while
technically imperative, might as well be declarative ("..., you will need to remember
...").
--Jim