i agree with Eric. The world, even the contra world, is not always a 
comfortable place. Within reason, we should be able to deal with it, 
especially on the dance floor.
Woody
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Woody Lane
Caller, Percussive Dancer
Roseburg, Oregon
http://www.woodylanecaller.com
home: 541-440-1926 cell: 541-556-0054
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On 9/9/2015 3:39 AM, Eric Black via Callers wrote:
  Wow.  ISTM [It Seems To Me] that this is far more
responsibility for 
 controlling social interpersonal interactions than the programmer 
 and/or caller at the mic should have to worry about, even though we do 
 worry about such things.
 Sorry I don’t have opportunity to participate on this email list more 
 often.  That Pesky Day Job [PDJ] and all…
 Short response: Don’t point out shadow partner interaction; the 
 dancers need to be adult about it, no one listens to the Caller 
 anyway, let alone anything said while they’re still lining up.
 Longer response:
 I really REALLY don’t think that there should be any announcement 
 calling attention to the fact that the next dance has interaction with 
 someone other than your chosen partner.   What, are we supposed to say 
 “This is a duple improper single progression with a shadow who is the 
 same active or inactive role one place below [or above] where you line 
 up”?
 Or should we say “Thank this partner, and ask another partner for the 
 next dance. As you line up, if there is someone at the dance here 
 tonight with whom you don’t want to dance, please make sure that they 
 are in a different longways set than you, or that if they are in the 
 same long set as you that they are not in an adjacent hands-four from 
 you either up or down as you line up for the dance.”
 Are we dance choreographers supposed to create dance sequences that 
 don’t have any “serious” interaction with the shadow partner, just in 
 case the dancers happen to line up such that someone on the floor has 
 an “Ex” as a shadow partner?  Or someone who hasn’t showered recently 
 enough?
 We already have the problem of MUC rejection of any dance that doesn’t 
 include both partner swing and neighbor swing; this seems to be an 
 injection of a problem of a potential swing with a neighbor some 
 dancers might not want to swing with, yet such swings are still required.
 I’m confused…
 <SoapBox>
 Yes, I understand the many reasons for not having serious shadow 
 interactions, but I am proud that every local dance community where 
 I’ve been a member, from NH/Boston to CA/SF, has understood that 
 interpersonal conflicts will happen, and yet social interactions are 
 required. They understand how to make everyone work together. Family 
 schisms are inevitable.  Personal hygiene issues may arise.
 I hope that everyone eventually can live the philosophy on Jeremiah’s 
 T-shirt: “Dance With Who’s Comin’ Atcha!"
 Even long-time couples break up.  It’s painful to the people involved 
 and also to everyone surrounding.   We’re all Community here. 
  Our Community is larger and more long-lived than the simple “nuclear 
 family” of two parents and 2.3 children.  That means we get to “enjoy” 
 many various kinds of family ties, both genetic and non-genetic. 
  The Community connection carries us all through this specific 
 break-up episode. The Dance entertains us and it heals us and it 
 strengthens The Community.
 I say this with a VERY PERSONAL involvement in this community support.
 Yes, we DO see what’s going on. Yes, we DO love both of you, even if 
 you’ve split apart, and even if there is a court restraining order 
 about you both showing up at our dance on the same night (that’s a 
 different discussion, and yes, it does happen).
 If there’s a personal hygiene problem, sometimes it simply can not be 
 helped.  I myself could change shirts whenever the band changes tunes 
 and it still would not be often enough. In such a case, please enjoy 
 fresh pheromones; fresh sweat can be enjoyable sweat.  If it’s stale 
 sweat, then by all means tell the person that a shower with soap would 
 make him/her a more enjoyable dance partner. That’s a quiet 
 face-to-face conversation.
 BUT please dance for several seconds, smile, and move on.
 All that aside, any swing can be changed to an allemande right once or 
 twice (to taste), or an elbow swing, or a do-si-do, or a gypsy (with 
 varying amounts of eye contact, again to taste).  Experienced dancers, 
 especially a split dancer couple who encounter each other in line, 
 will do whatever they feel comfortable with. What a GREAT opportunity 
 to swap roles with your partner, given a little look-ahead!  (“Oh! 
 that’s my Ex ahead; let’s swap!” or just take hands with the palm-up 
 signal that you’re taking the “Gent” role next time)   Painless and fun.
 Never mind that experienced dancers often rewrite the dance to change 
 a non-swing dance move into a swing, even in the middle of a hey; it’s 
 just as easy to go the other direction, to reduce interaction.  That’s 
 what dancers do. Just Be In The Right Place At The Right Time.
 We always say that a neighbor interaction is “just one time through 
 the tune, just 30 seconds”.  Well, a shadow interaction is generally 
 at most one 8-count thing; 4 seconds repeated every once in a while as 
 wonderful music plays.  Maybe double that for some dances, so then 
 about 8 seconds out of every half minute or so.
 It seems to me that we as social animals should be able to deal with that.
 Certainly we do this in our daily lives on the 
 street/office/garage/whatever.  We can be civil and even develop the 
 ability to enjoy a 10-second interaction with an ex we encounter in a 
 public event.
 One of the things I love about contra dance is that it gives us all an 
 opportunity to “be” the persona we live the rest of the time, or “be” 
 someone else during The Dance.  We’re wearing a costume while we’re 
 dancing, even if it’s not obvious.  Many of our dancers have an 
 on-the-floor personality which is quite different from the personality 
 they exhibit the rest of the time (such as while talking and enjoying 
 refreshments at the break during the evening dance).  Certainly I wear 
 a different persona on the dance floor than when I am at the break, 
 and I’m someone else if I’m calling, and someone else if I’m the dance 
 organizer.
 THEN there’s the issue of identifying which of the various people 
 “near” you as you line up might be your shadow/TrailBuddy.  In a 
 Becket dance it’s likely to be your neighbor to the side in line, or 
 could be next beyond them, or the neighbor to the other side, or maybe 
 the next beyond them.  I TRULY advise against spending too much effort 
 in identifying the “Corner/TrailBuddy” in advance, as the dancers are 
 lined up.  In a duple improper, your shadow could be ahead, could be 
 behind.  It depends on the choreography. And it changes if someone 
 drops out, or if someone joins in after the walkthrough.
 That’s not the place to spend your precious seconds at the mic as a 
 caller.  Get them moving and listening to the music.
 </SoapBox>
 We already have the problem of MUC [Modern Urban Contra] rejection of 
 any dance that doesn’t include both partner swing and neighbor swing; 
 this seems to be an injection of a problem of a potential swing with a 
 neighbor some dancers might not want to swing with, yet such swings 
 are still required.
 I’m confused...
 -Eric