There's only one thing I can think of to try at that point, and that's to strike
up a conversation at the break, ask the guy if he's enjoying the evening, how he heard
about the dance, etc., and if conversation indicates he's not compromised in some
obvious fashion, then ask him what's up. Had something similar happen to me with a
couple that would fit the description you gave. It turned out that as a consequence of
surgery he would have occasional, unpredictable disorientation episodes. He really wanted
to dance but it may have brought on a spell; at any rate, though he seemed clueless, he
had instead been trying to fight the disorientation and continue dancing, but he realized
with disappointment after a few attempts that he couldn't dance any more that evening.
He was a good guy and I wish he could have participated more fully.
On Mar 19, 2011, at 10:05 PM, Alan Winston - SSRL Central Computing wrote:
Callers:
(I should say, I'm used to dealing with clueless, drunk, not-listening ONS
dancers, and I have a repertoire of incredibly-accessible material. So my
usual approach at ONS is only to worry about people who are being dangerous,
and not worry much about clueless, and to call material where you can be pretty
far off and it still works. Even fairly-sophisticated contra-dance falls into
that realm, because somebody will be along to swing you, circle with you, etc,
pretty soon. So this is maybe an English-specific problem, but I'm suspecting
not.)
I co-called the Palo Alto English last night with Lise Dyckman. (We expected a
somewhat challenging night because many of the strongest local dancers are off
at Spring Fever weekend.) Got a decent turnout (24+), about a third of them
first-timers or quite new dancers.
One guy (50ish, not visibly impaired, seemed nice enough) showed up with a
group about 10 minutes late. When it got to be my turn to call, I gave an
abridged version of the orientation session (up, down, in, out, partner,
neighbor, dance with anybody). Naturally, he did the first two dances in a
row with one of the women he'd come in with. He was clueless and active (don't
know what to do, must do something, do something random); she was clueless and
passive (don't know what to do, will wait until somebody makes me do
something).
First, I commend the community of dancers who were there that night. They
pretty soon got that couple separated; didn't display visible impatience, and
continued helpful and welcoming, without grabbing, pulling, and pushing. Good
work, everybody!
Here are things that didn't seem to help this guy in any visible way:
- continuing to call the dance when everybody else had it
- doing demos of things that we otherwise would not (eg, Trip to Tunbridge)
- having dancers in his set beckon or point, as appropriate
- strong partners who tried to lead him (by whatever means) where he needed
to go
- pointing out other people in the line in the same role to copy from.
- second walkthroughs
I gave up following a problem couple up and down the set and calling to just
them years ago; that almost never works and just raises everybody's anxiety
level. I don't think it would have helped here.
We tweaked our program to the simpler end of the things we'd been thinking
about, but didn't revert to the one-night-stand/barn-dance level, since that
wasn't what the vast majority of people there had come for. [To be honest, I
didn't even consider that - which I've done when, eg, the whole
not-previously-dancing Revels children's chorus turned up unexpectedly at a
country dance I was calling, expecting to dance - but if I had consciously
considered it, I would have discarded it for that reason.]
I could see that he was never really managing to build a model of the dance,
and that he was, if anything, a kinetic learner. (Eg, in Portabella, where if
you're a 1 the A1 is gent cast off with partner behind and orbit through 2s
place and back to place, and B2 is 1s cross, cast, and half-figure eight, he
seemd to have some kind of memetic entrapment where having crossed he'd turn
back and follow his partner down the wrong side, as though it were A1 again.)
I don't think he ever connected pieces of music to pieces of dance. It wasn't
"he's got it except for"; I don't think he ever understood the basics
of any
dance well enough to be able to fix the parts that weren't working.
He sat down at the last dance before the break and didn't dance again the rest
of the evening.
Now, maybe he's just not cut out for this. (I think that if somebody threw me
into a football game in progress, and I just got a brief description in the
huddle of what I was supposed to do and I didn't understand how timeouts
worked, etc, I'd look completely clueless and overwhelmed, and there are ways
in which this is like that. It was more like a football game than usual,
actually, because among the things he never understood was the difference
between going down the inside of the set and the outside of the set, so there
were considerably more near-collisions than usual. I'm not cut out for
football, but if I got a bunch of explanations, coaching, and questions
answered, I would at least look more like I knew what was going on. And of
course he didn't get that.)
But maybe my bag of tricks isn't deep enough.
What do you to do reach somebody like this? When do you know to let it go?
-- Alan
--
===============================================================================
Alan Winston --- WINSTON(a)SSRL.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU
Disclaimer: I speak only for myself, not SLAC or SSRL Phone: 650/926-3056
Paper mail to: SSRL -- SLAC BIN 99, 2575 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Park CA 94025
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