Another possibility would be either a university dance department or the
department that does human performance (sports) and/or physical therapy.
They might have the required gear to analyze dance motions. But, they will
probably ask, what problem are you trying to solve? Once you have the
information, how will you use it? (Or, how will it help me get tenure?)
--jh--
On Sat, Mar 30, 2024 at 7:36 PM Chris Lahey <clahey(a)clahey.net> wrote:
I'm thinking about it, but my likelihood of
following through based on
interest and difficulty is probably single digit percentages.
The main reason is knowledge as Jeff said, but I do think we could improve
teaching if we had a deep knowledge of this stuff.
On Sat, Mar 30, 2024, 15:45 Joe Harrington <contradancerjoe(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
> Are you actually thinking of doing this? Why? Would it help anyone dance
> better? If someone does this kind of thing for work and could tap into
> those resources, it might be practical. Otherwise, this looks like the
> kind of setup that would require significant thought, effort, and expense.
>
> One approach would be to green-suit up in a video-game studio, and then
> tap into the calculations that the game software uses to create game
> motions from human ones. That wouldn't be measurements of forces directly,
> but it would be pretty comprehensive. You'd know where all the momentum
> went and it would calculate transmitted forces through every surface, which
> you could sum for the hand and arm, etc. They might also have force
> sensors of some sort. Somebody must have, at some point in the development
> of those systems.
>
> --jh--
>
>
> On Sat, Mar 30, 2024 at 3:17 PM Chris Lahey <clahey(a)clahey.net> wrote:
>
>> Does anyone have any thoughts about how we can measure some of this? I
>> can definitely imagine a force pad on someone's back to measure the
>> tension, but I'm a bit lost as to how he can measure the ground forces
>> (including possibly torque around a vertical axis)?
>>
>> I think normal force should be easy. That can be built into a pad on the
>> ground if nothing else, but friction would be harder.
>>
>> Unless we had multiple pads each of which had force sensors in all 3
>> axes (plus a rotational sensor) does anyone know how much such an apparatus
>> would cost to build?
>>
>> Now that I think about 3 axis force sensors, i wonder if there's much
>> lateral or vertical force in the connection point and whether I'd there is
>> that feels bad in some natural way.
>>
>> On Sat, Mar 30, 2024, 13:37 Joe Harrington via Contra Callers <
>> contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Funny thing, I wrote the email below last Sunday and thought, do the
>>> world's callers really want a physics calculation on their mailing list?
I
>>> decided the better of it and didn't send it. Ok, I guess I was wrong...
>>>
>>> What I call support is against centrifugal force, not vertical. Of
>>> course, there's no need to lift the other dancer, and it's a really
poor
>>> idea.
>>>
>>> As Jeff pointed out, in a fast swing, there's a lot of centrifugal
>>> force, as seen from our rotating frame of reference in the swing. For
>>> physics buffs, centrifugal force increases as the square of velocity, so a
>>> swing that goes around three times in 8 beats rather than twice (1.5x
>>> faster rotation, the first-level "fast swing") has 2.25 times as
much
>>> outward force to support. Estimating a 25 cm radius (about 50 cm between
>>> the centers of mass of the two dancers, in the middles of their abdomens,
>>> which I measured with a tape measure) and a 70 kg (150 lb) dancer,
that's
>>> an outward force for each of the two bodies of almost 390 Newtons, or
>>> nearly 90 pounds. Much of that will be borne by the friction between the
>>> dancer's feet and the floor, but the rest will be held by the supporting
>>> dancer(s). How much depends on how they lean. For a standard swing (2
>>> rotations per 8 beats), it's just under 40 lbs. Fortunately, you only
have
>>> to hold it for four to eight seconds at a time, or actually less as you
>>> accelerate and decelerate inside that time, though the peak force will then
>>> be higher.
>>>
>>> ...and now I add...
>>>
>>> Despite starting with it above, myself, I think we're somewhat
>>> misleading ourselves with this Mv**2/r calculation.
>>>
>>> The key thing here is that a centrifugal-force calculation
>>> (centripetal, actually) makes some assumptions that we dramatically violate
>>> when we dance. We are not rigid bodies. At best, we're collections of
many
>>> light rigid bodies (our bones) linked by ligaments, tendons, and muscles,
>>> and bearing all sorts of other masses that move relative to one another,
>>> storing momentum until we can deal with it in the next step. We
>>> effectively pump momentum up from our feet, into our bodies, and down to
>>> our feet on each step. We transfer it to the other dancer through our arms
>>> and theirs, and their back, if we have a hand there.
>>>
>>> With that in mind, consider this model of a swing. Each dancer's upper
>>> half is trying to execute rigid circular motion. Our lower bodies (hips
>>> down) are doing something else, and half our mass is down there. So, drop
>>> my estimated 90 lbs to 45 just for that (I'll drop it more in a minute).
>>> The lower half is essentially stepping a figure with 90 or 135 degree
>>> corners on each beat. Consider the left foot. In a standard swing (2x in
>>> 8 beats), it is walking a square, directing momentum along the sides of the
>>> square that the upper body picks up and turns into rotation. Half of each
>>> square side brings that leg closer to the middle, the other half takes it
>>> farther away. We land, push off, and do it again and again. That push-off
>>> supports the centripetal needs of both legs (through the hip joint) and
>>> some of the upper body. If there is an outward lean off the right foot,
>>> additional centripetal support is needed from either the legs or arms. The
>>> right foot is mainly a pivot, while both feet support gravitational weight.
>>>
>>> Good dancers constantly adjust how far out their left feet land on each
>>> step and how hard they push off, simultaneously satisfying both their
>>> centripetal needs and the required spin rate. This lets them control how
>>> much inward force they draw from their feet into the upper-body rotation to
>>> supplement the arms. That reduces the support needed from the arms well
>>> below 45 lbs. It can reduce it to zero. Tweaking the lean also adjusts
>>> where the axis of rotation is, to balance the different masses of the
>>> dancers and make their differing force impulses produce matched torque
>>> impulses. Dancers use the beat to step in sync with the other dancer's
>>> legs, or these torque impulses would come at different times, and the swing
>>> would wobble and fall apart, as Chris Lacey alluded to.
>>>
>>> So, yeah, it's complicated, yet even children solve this problem when
>>> they swing. Everyone is an intuitive physicist! And, each time I think
>>> about this kind of thing, I get more amazed at the engineers who make
>>> robots. Has anyone taught a robot to do a contra swing, yet?
>>>
>>> --jh--
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sun, Mar 24, 2024 at 3:24 PM Julian Blechner <
>>> juliancallsdances(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Joe,
>>>>
>>>> You mean, palms flat on the back of shoulderblades? If so, it's how
I
>>>> teach it, lots of callers teach it, and this is the first I've heard
a
>>>> complaint about it.
>>>>
>>>> That said, you describe: "I've had my elbow bent backward by
eager
>>>> robins pressing my elbow in to get their elbow in the right place."
>>>>
>>>> That _sounds like_ what I call "arm clamping". While yes,
putting
>>>> Robin's hand on the outside of the shoulder also alleviates the
clamping,
>>>> it's not the only way to fix it. A Robin can lift their elbow. (I
just
>>>> workshopped the issue with my partner in the living room to test a
variety
>>>> of height and holds out to confirm what you were saying, as well.)
>>>>
>>>> The other issue is that if both dancers don't have hands flat on the
>>>> backs of each other, it's more difficult to maintain an open frame
when
>>>> swinging. One usually winds up _closer_ when hands are resting on
>>>> shoulders, unless one dancer is significantly stronger and the other is
>>>> fairly petite.
>>>>
>>>> I know that my right arm will get seriously fatigued and sore if I
>>>> have an evening too many times as Lark with Robins providing
insufficient
>>>> support. And I've heard plenty of dancers say similar.
>>>>
>>>> That said, all bodies are different. If yours works where the swing
>>>> hold works better for you the way you describe, that is what it is,
yeah?
>>>> But I might recommend considering workshopping swings further, because
what
>>>> you're requesting is counter to prevailing teaching. If I understand
>>>> correctly (and it's always possible I'm missing something.)
>>>>
>>>> In dance,
>>>> Julian Blechner
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Sun, Mar 24, 2024, 1:13 PM Joe Harrington <
>>>> contradancerjoe(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Not the standard ballroom, with the robin's arm on top of the
lark's,
>>>>> but an alternative that I've seen occasionally, but for a number
of years
>>>>> now, where the robin tries to put their left hand in the same
location on
>>>>> the lark's back as the lark has their right hand on the
robin's back. I
>>>>> know at least one prominent caller who teaches this hold in their
newbie
>>>>> workshop and tells their dancers that both sides need to do this to
provide
>>>>> equal support in the swing.
>>>>>
>>>>> While I like the principle, the practice can hurt. If the dancers
are
>>>>> not grossly mismatched in size/arm length, it won't be possible
to do this
>>>>> without their elbows occupying the same space. I've had my elbow
bent
>>>>> backward by eager robins pressing my elbow in to get their elbow in
the
>>>>> right place. Even if it doesn't go all the way to pain, it
pretty much
>>>>> eliminates my ability to provide any support, unless I "fight
back" by
>>>>> pushing my elbow out and resisting the inward pressure, essentially
>>>>> refusing the position. I'm also focusing entirely on protecting
my elbow,
>>>>> so it kills any enjoyment in that swing.
>>>>>
>>>>> Please gently discourage this hold. If a robin wants to give major
>>>>> support in a swing, the symmetric swing holds, the barrel, the one
Jeff
>>>>> described, or even a mirror of the ballroom where the lark's arm
is on top
>>>>> are much better opportunities. A robin whose arm is longer than
their
>>>>> lark's arm can also reach over or around the shoulder in a
ballroom hold
>>>>> (robin's arm on top) to add support. Just don't push down on
the shoulder.
>>>>>
>>>>> --jh--
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Fri, Mar 22, 2024 at 9:21 AM Julian Blechner <
>>>>> juliancallsdances(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> JJ,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I like your point about the sort of code-switching that the
>>>>>> asymmetry of a ballroom hold provides to reinforce what role one
is dancing.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Joe,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I don't understand what you mean about the ballroom hold
having
>>>>>> elbows occupy the same space. I think I'd need to see it (in
person or
>>>>>> picture). That said, it raises the broader issue, which is the
overall
>>>>>> topic, that everyone has different physical needs and finding
happy mediums
>>>>>> is our goal for everyone dancing together. Your issue with
ballroom hold
>>>>>> handholds as such is a good reminder for me that no one - not
even seasoned
>>>>>> callers - can anticipate every need or difference.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In dance,
>>>>>> Julian Blechner
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 21, 2024, 10:38 PM JJ <jcgj95(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Personally for me, the standard ballroom swing helps me to
"flip
>>>>>>> the switch" in the brain on which side of the swing
I'm "supposed to" end
>>>>>>> on (assuming we're not switching roles back and forth for
fun lol). If my
>>>>>>> left arm is the "pointy arm," I'm ending on the
left; if my right arm is
>>>>>>> the "pointy arm," I'm ending on the right. I
don't have to consciously tell
>>>>>>> myself "I'm the Lark" or "I'm the
Robin," my muscle memory just takes over
>>>>>>> and I just end on whichever side my arm position tells me to
😅.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I enjoy neutral swings, but if we're not planning on
switching
>>>>>>> roles without warning through an individual dance, I tend to
stick with the
>>>>>>> traditional ballroom figure.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 21, 2024, 22:33 Jeff Kaufman via Contra Callers
<
>>>>>>> contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> "At the time, it almost never happened that the one
in the lady's
>>>>>>>> role actually swung like a lady. I'm not sure when
that became the norm."
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> When I started dancing both roles, around 2005, I
remember
>>>>>>>> initially doing it as you said, with gender-neutral
swings with the gents I
>>>>>>>> encountered. I remember being surprised sometime around
2006-2007 when I
>>>>>>>> ran into a few guys dancing switch who indicated they
wanted to do the
>>>>>>>> standard ballroom hold. By 2008-2009 I think my male
friends and I were
>>>>>>>> dancing the lady's role in the standard way?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Jeff
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 21, 2024 at 10:16 PM Joe Harrington via
Contra Callers
>>>>>>>> <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I love the barrel hold, but some of my partners have
reacted in a
>>>>>>>>> way that indicated it was too intimate for them.
This is especially true
>>>>>>>>> if I have to lean over to do it, as that puts my face
pretty close to
>>>>>>>>> theirs (I'm pretty tall). It's also
difficult to do without frontal
>>>>>>>>> contact if one or both partners is well on the heavy
side. But, all that
>>>>>>>>> aside, if you and your partner like fast swings,
it's a great hold, more
>>>>>>>>> stable than ballroom, with four arms providing
support rather than one.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> In the late 1980s and early 1990s, when guys danced
the lady's
>>>>>>>>> role (using the terminology of the time for reasons
you'll see in a
>>>>>>>>> moment), we'd almost universally be offered the
"gender-neutral swing",
>>>>>>>>> which is symmetrical and very stable for fast
swinging: both right arms are
>>>>>>>>> around the other's back and both left arms go
over/around the other's right
>>>>>>>>> arm, bend 90 degrees at the elbow, pass between you,
and clasp left hands
>>>>>>>>> around each other's forearms between your bodies.
At the time, it almost
>>>>>>>>> never happened that the one in the lady's role
actually swung like a lady.
>>>>>>>>> I'm not sure when that became the norm. I would
occasionally do it with a
>>>>>>>>> particular guy partner whom I liked to dance with.
We practiced it first
>>>>>>>>> and then did it with each other, but we
gender-neutral-swung our
>>>>>>>>> neighbors. We got some pretty surprised looks from
our neighbors when we
>>>>>>>>> swung each other. At least one guy asked me if that
partner and I were an
>>>>>>>>> item. Times and role terms and what people read into
dance behavior
>>>>>>>>> change...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> In general, I'm quite happy to swing with guys in
either role
>>>>>>>>> when they're happy to swing with me. But,
it's awkward and uncomfortable
>>>>>>>>> in the extreme to be going up an entire line of
consecutive frowns, growls,
>>>>>>>>> and looks of disgust as a guy dancing the
robbin...enough that I haven't
>>>>>>>>> returned to the dance weekend where that happened in
Fall 2022, even though
>>>>>>>>> it was pretty great in other ways.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> The one swing style I really dislike is a modified
ballroom
>>>>>>>>> position where the robbin tries to put their hand on
the lark's back in the
>>>>>>>>> same place where the lark's hand is on theirs. I
know some people actually
>>>>>>>>> teach it this way, I guess as some kind of equality
thing. It's terrible,
>>>>>>>>> because their elbow and the lark's elbow then
have to occupy the same
>>>>>>>>> space, which, well, physics. If I'm the lark and
their arm is outside
>>>>>>>>> mine, when they try to provide support, it
hyperextends my right elbow,
>>>>>>>>> eliminating any chance I can provide support and
sometimes inducing pain
>>>>>>>>> before I can either force my elbow back out,
displacing their hand from my
>>>>>>>>> back, or pull my arm up to rest it on their arm in a
mirror of the
>>>>>>>>> traditional ballroom hold. I hope we can convince
everyone to stop
>>>>>>>>> teaching this hold, as it usually doesn't work as
intended and it can hurt
>>>>>>>>> the lark.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> One assist that does work in ballroom position and
requires no
>>>>>>>>> communication is, if the robbin's arm is as long
as or longer than the
>>>>>>>>> lark's, they rest their left arm on the
lark's right, extending the entire
>>>>>>>>> length of the arm and then reaching around/over the
lark's shoulder to
>>>>>>>>> provide some support on the shoulder blade. In my
case, at least, if they
>>>>>>>>> are short enough that they can't do this, then
they're often also light
>>>>>>>>> enough that additional support isn't critical,
though it does make for more
>>>>>>>>> connection. It's important not to press down on
the shoulder, though. Only
>>>>>>>>> pull forward.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> --jh--
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 21, 2024 at 12:52 PM Julian Blechner via
Contra
>>>>>>>>> Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> At the last couple of dances in the last few
days, I thought
>>>>>>>>>> about this email thread and observations.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Short and simple:
>>>>>>>>>> A "barrel hold" swing:
>>>>>>>>>> - Seemed to provide a little bit more space than
a ballroom hold
>>>>>>>>>> - One neighbor offered it (by chance) really
clearly, as a lark,
>>>>>>>>>> with his left arm curved into a sort of
"offer a hug" type position. As we
>>>>>>>>>> engaged in the swing hold, he placed his left arm
in place, and it guided
>>>>>>>>>> things in. It worked pretty well for me, at least
as an experienced dancer.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> In dance,
>>>>>>>>>> -Julian Blechner
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On Sat, Mar 16, 2024 at 4:18 PM becky.liddle---
via Contra
>>>>>>>>>> Callers
<contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I can’t answer whether the robin's would
always HAVE to go
>>>>>>>>>>> above the lark’s in the modified ballroom
swing, but I would intuitively
>>>>>>>>>>> think that having that rule/understanding
might make it easier for dancers
>>>>>>>>>>> to make the transition from ballroom to
modified ballroom because the
>>>>>>>>>>> robin’s arm is always on top in standard
ballroom swing. Also, the lark’s
>>>>>>>>>>> hand is typically cupped upwards with the
robin’s hand above the lark’s in
>>>>>>>>>>> things like a balance or even a handhold in a
circle move, so having the
>>>>>>>>>>> hand/arm orientations the same in the swing
would also seem more intuitive
>>>>>>>>>>> to me if I were just learning this swing.
>>>>>>>>>>> Becky
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Mar 16, 2024, at 12:25 PM, Katherine
Kitching via Contra
>>>>>>>>>>> Callers
<contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Hi John, thanks for all your comments. I like
this swing at
>>>>>>>>>>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUiXStkCHGs
from 0:05 to 0:15
>>>>>>>>>>> - for spacing -- and I'm going to
introduce it at our next dance! Though
>>>>>>>>>>> what I think Becky found interesting about
the variation we're working on
>>>>>>>>>>> is that it retains the "pointy
hands", which can be useful.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> The one thing that I was confused about when
I read your
>>>>>>>>>>> message: you say when you tried the swing
variation our group has been
>>>>>>>>>>> experimenting with (visual at
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/ebotfe2jksbr3dqbjyiuf/Modified-Ballroom-Swin…
>>>>>>>>>>> )
>>>>>>>>>>>
<https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/ebotfe2jksbr3dqbjyiuf/Modified-Ballroom-Swing-elbow-hold.jpg?rlkey=ekblzvpc2tk2hkbtfrh9u96au&dl=0>
>>>>>>>>>>> -- you say that you found the grip
insufficient, for the arms
>>>>>>>>>>> that are holding just above the elbow.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> But in my mind, this hold that me and my
partner are doing with
>>>>>>>>>>> his left hand my right hand , is supposed to
be the same as the hold you
>>>>>>>>>>> use in this video of yours - (but in your
case, your left hand and her
>>>>>>>>>>> right hand.)
>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe I didn't execute it properly, but
it is what I intended:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
https://youtu.be/yUbi1B2Edk0?si=HL-3jgI95LtGZBQ_&t=198
>>>>>>>>>>> Starts at 3:18.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thoughts?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Also, is anyone able to answer my question to
Winston -
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Is it a given, due to something in the
asymmetric nature of the
>>>>>>>>>>> hold, that in this video referenced by Allan
-
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ0R5iHT-l8
<https://youtu.be/yUbi1B2Edk0?si=HL-3jgI95LtGZBQ_&t=198> or in the photo I
shared above via Dropbox, that the Robin's arm will *always* go above the Lark's
arm?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Or could the placement of the arms vary
depending on the relative height of the two dancing partners?
>>>>>>>>>>> (for example with a 6' tall Lark and a
5' tall Robin, would the Robin's arm still be above the Lark's?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks all!
>>>>>>>>>>> Kat K in Halifax
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> John Sweeney via Contra Callers
>>>>>>>>>>> <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
>>>>>>>>>>> Thursday, March 14, 2024 7:23 AM
>>>>>>>>>>> Hi Kat,
>>>>>>>>>>> Yes, I thought you meant something like you
show in your photo.
>>>>>>>>>>> When you mentioned Jeff's photo I did
wonder, as it is what I call a
>>>>>>>>>>> Foreshortened Hold in my video and brings you
closer together rather than
>>>>>>>>>>> further apart.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I picked up the Foreshortened Hold from the
cover of Zesty
>>>>>>>>>>> Contras and love it. I was surprised when I
analysed the 600 dancers at a
>>>>>>>>>>> contra dance at The Flurry and realised that
nobody else was using it!
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> We tried your Modified Ballroom Hold Swing
and didn't feel that
>>>>>>>>>>> it really worked. With my right arm
underneath there didn't seem to be
>>>>>>>>>>> enough connection to have a really good swing
unless Karen gripped my arm.
>>>>>>>>>>> I felt that my hand might slide down. With my
right arm on top Karen felt
>>>>>>>>>>> that it was pulling on her shoulder even
though I wasn't gripping - it was
>>>>>>>>>>> just awkward. So, sorry, but I won't be
using that one.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Re all the references to sore
arms/hands/wrists/etc. The
>>>>>>>>>>> biggest problem is that people are told to
"give weight". I don't want your
>>>>>>>>>>> weight! People misunderstand and lean back or
sideways. If people control
>>>>>>>>>>> their own weight then all the connection has
to do is counter centrifugal
>>>>>>>>>>> force and that it not a lot inless you spin
really fast.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I always start a Swing lesson by getting the
dancers to Buzz on
>>>>>>>>>>> the spot BY THEMSELVES. Then when they
connect they keep their own balance
>>>>>>>>>>> and weight.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I have had major operations on both my
shoulders (too much
>>>>>>>>>>> Repetitive Strain Injury from another style
of dance that is taught badly,
>>>>>>>>>>> and then lots of Aerials:
>>>>>>>>>>>
https://youtu.be/CJnL_Y63AnY?si=RqKHSw5MQmhiuIFT - maybe I
>>>>>>>>>>> shouldn't have started doing those in my
fifties!). Anyway, I can't afford
>>>>>>>>>>> to let people damage my shoulders. With a
good partner I can Swing at high
>>>>>>>>>>> speeds with no problem. Whenever someone
leans back or sideways I just slow
>>>>>>>>>>> the Swing down and lessen my connection so
that they have to take their own
>>>>>>>>>>> weight or fall over.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Anyway, if you can get everyone to keep their
own weight you
>>>>>>>>>>> will find it is much less strain on your
arm/hand/wrist.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> The standard Quebecois Swing has the feet
interleaved. They
>>>>>>>>>>> seem to do it without any problem. It is just
a different feel and takes
>>>>>>>>>>> some getting used to.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Someone mentioned the challenges with being
too close in a
>>>>>>>>>>> Ceilidh Swing (
>>>>>>>>>>>
http://contrafusion.co.uk/SwingWorkshop.html#Ceilidh ) - you
>>>>>>>>>>> could always try the Forearm Swing instead (
>>>>>>>>>>>
http://contrafusion.co.uk/SwingWorkshop.html#Linked ) - same
>>>>>>>>>>> principle, but further apart so no bodily
contact.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Happy dancing,
>>>>>>>>>>> John
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> John Sweeney, Dancer, England
john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625
>>>>>>>>>>> 362 & 07802 940 574
>>>>>>>>>>>
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in
Kent
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
_______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> Contra Callers mailing list --
>>>>>>>>>>> contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>>>>>>>>>>> To unsubscribe send an email to
>>>>>>>>>>> contracallers-leave(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>>>>>>>>>>> becky.liddle--- via Contra Callers
>>>>>>>>>>> <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
>>>>>>>>>>> Wednesday, March 13, 2024 10:20 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> For me, the enforced intimacy is about the
proximity of bodies
>>>>>>>>>>> and lack of physical air space between them.
The huge difference between a
>>>>>>>>>>> swing in contra vs., say, agreeing to dance a
waltz or a swing dance with
>>>>>>>>>>> someone, is that by agreeing to dance you’re
agreeing to swing with EVERY
>>>>>>>>>>> opposite-role person in the line, not just
the person you asked to dance.
>>>>>>>>>>> That’s a much bigger commitment to physical
contact/intimacy than saying
>>>>>>>>>>> yes to one person.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> As a side note, before we got rid of a
lecherous dancer in our
>>>>>>>>>>> group a few years ago, MANY women in our
dance group chose their contra
>>>>>>>>>>> dance line specifically to avoid having to
swing with him. The most
>>>>>>>>>>> important intervention was, of course, to
establish a code of conduct which
>>>>>>>>>>> we used to remove him from the dance group
(when it became clear he would
>>>>>>>>>>> not agree to change his behaviour). But for
women (and others, but it’s
>>>>>>>>>>> always been women who have said this to me
over the years), when they come
>>>>>>>>>>> to a dance not KNOWING whether there MIGHT be
a letch in the line, it is
>>>>>>>>>>> asking quite a lot to expect them to do a
ballroom swing with whoever comes
>>>>>>>>>>> at them. I am wondering whether the modified
ballroom hold might make
>>>>>>>>>>> contra feel safer, especially for new
dancers.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I’d love to hear what folks who have used
both feel about the
>>>>>>>>>>> difference.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Becky
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> On Mar 13, 2024, at 4:34 PM, Julian Blechner
>>>>>>>>>>> <juliancallsdances(a)gmail.com>
<juliancallsdances(a)gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> I would love to read elaboration /
articulation on why a
>>>>>>>>>>> ballroom hold feels more "intimate"
than other holds?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
_______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>>>> Contra Callers mailing list --
>>>>>>>>>>> contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>>>>>>>>>>> To unsubscribe send an email to
>>>>>>>>>>> contracallers-leave(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>>>>>>>>>>> Julian Blechner via Contra Callers
>>>>>>>>>>> <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
>>>>>>>>>>> Wednesday, March 13, 2024 5:34 PM
>>>>>>>>>>> I would love to read elaboration /
articulation on why a
>>>>>>>>>>> ballroom hold feels more "intimate"
than other holds?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Is it a matter of the historical social
attachment we have in
>>>>>>>>>>> our minds with couples dances that use the
hold, and romance in our culture?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Is it a physical proximity? (I find ceilidh
holds to be closer,
>>>>>>>>>>> crossed arms has my hands bearish their belly
which has its own intimacy to
>>>>>>>>>>> me, though sometimes barrel holds can be done
with a bit more space -
>>>>>>>>>>> though I wouldn't say the default)
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Is it something else?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe if we looked at the why, it'd give
insight to what a
>>>>>>>>>>> solution to an alternate swing hold and/or an
adjusted mindset might entail?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> In dance,
>>>>>>>>>>> Julian Blechner
>>>>>>>>>>> He/him
>>>>>>>>>>> Western Mass
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
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