On Sat, Sep 03, 2016, tavi merrill via Callers wrote:
Despite the hours we spend workshopping the ladies' chain, we spend
virtually no time collectively addressing how to teach gents' (left-handed)
chains. As a consequence, male dancers miss out on opportunities to twirl;
understanding of the importance of cues and flourish best-practices (as
opposed to cranking ladies around) remains spotty; and some great dances*
rarely get called.
Meh. I think you've got part of a point, but as someone who gender-swaps
regularly (often within a single set), I find doing the reverse courtesy
turn way more difficult than doing a regular courtesy turn dancing raven.
And I'm also a heavy-duty twirler, both lark and raven. And I'm usually
good about paying attention to whether someone wants to be twirled.
Probably I could learn the reverse courtesy turn, but I think you're
underestimating the difficulty.
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