First you have to define the term touching on the dance floor. Many people do not like to
manhandled through a move to show them how it flows whether it's the call of not.
Even just a re-direction by pushing their shoulder or arm can intimidate or embarrass
them. When teaching as the caller and a single dancer is completely lost, I tend to
ignore it and let them work it out during the dance. If several dancers are having the
same issue, I may ask one of them if it's okay to follow them through the figure and
redirect them if necessary. They become the demonstration set and everyone cheers when it
finally works. But I still try to do that type of intervention rarely.
Harold
-----Original Message-----
From: callers-bounces(a)sharedweight.net [mailto:callers-bounces@sharedweight.net] On Behalf
Of Aahz Maruch
Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 10:08 AM
To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
Subject: Re: [Callers] Tactile adjustment (was Circle & pass through as the last move
of a dance)
On Wed, Feb 12, 2014, Lindsay Morris wrote:
Bruce Hamilton's excellent one-pager on how experienced dancers can
best help
<http://www.portlandcountrydance.org/files/When%20Not%20Caller.pdf>new
comers is worth a read. In fact, it's worth handing out at the dance.
Worth a read, yes; worth handing out, not sure. I vehemently disagree with the injunction
against touching -- anyone want to defend it?
--
Hugs and backrubs -- I break Rule 6
http://rule6.info/
<*> <*> <*>
Help a hearing-impaired person:
http://rule6.info/hearing.html
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