Hand on back of shoulder prevents the dreaded elbow clamp,
And reinforces that the follow needs to support SOME of their own weight.
Both of those issues have caused me shoulder problems.
On Wednesday, June 19, 2019 John Sweeney via Organizers <john(a)modernjive.com>
wrote:
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In the video that Larry recommends (great video in general), re the lady’s left hand, Sue
says, "and pushes into his shoulder blade".
Please don’t! It is unnecessary and uncomfortable!
In fact I disagree with getting the lady to try and reach the man’s back at all. Her hand
resting on his upper arm is a far nicer connection.
For the details, read on:
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
An essay on the lady's left hand in a swing:
Yes, I know some very well-respected American callers who teach a swing with the
lady's left hand on the back of the man's shoulder blade.
I believe that there are many challenges associated with this:
1) The man, who, on average, has longer arms, reaches under the lady's arm to very
easily reach her shoulder-blade. The lady, with her (on average) shorter arms and
probably starting from lower down, has to reach OVER the man's arm to get to his
shoulder-blade. Yes, some ladies can reach. But in my experience many ladies cannot
easily reach and still be comfortable.
2) If they can just reach, many ladies then, instead of just placing their hand on the
man's shoulder-blade (so that when centrifugal force increases they can resist it)
they actually press into the man's shoulder-blade. I am not sure if this is just bad
technique, but I suspect it may be partially to do with the fact that they can only just
reach so they press so that their hand doesn't slip. It can be quite uncomfortable
for the man.
3) Even if the lady's arm is the same length as the man, and she is the same height,
she still has to reach over his arm, so it automatically pulls you closer together than
you need to be, and even closer if her arm is shorter. While there are fun swing
variations where we get really, really close, in a standard buzz-step swing I don’t
believe that being forced closer together is desirable.
4) It is not necessary if the man's hand is well placed. Each person should support
their own weight, so all the connection is doing is resisting centrifugal force and, in 50
years of swinging, I have never found that a problem.
5) It is quite common for the lady to twirl under the man's arm at the end of a swing.
If the lady twirls counter-clockwise that is not a problem. But if she twirls clockwise
then she will break her arm. Probably not a problem if the lady is completely in control
of the twirl - she just prepares for it by moving her arm, but if the man takes some part
in initiating the twirl (which I believe is very common) then if he tries to twirl her and
she reacts slowly, then either the twirl fails or she gets hurt. Of course if the
lady's left hand is just resting on the man's upper arm she can twirl either way
without a problem. The hand just slides off easily.
6) In complex flourishes, such as a Texas Tommy/Apache Whip exit from a swing, then you
really do need some lead and follow, and it is nearly always the man leading the lady. A
move like that is impossible if the lady's left hand is on the man's back.
Believe me I have tried it!
I hope that helps you understand why I always teach the lady to leave her relaxed left arm
resting on the man's upper arm. :-)
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 & 07802 940
574
http://contrafusion.co.uk/KentCeilidhs.html for Live Music Ceilidhs
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive DVDs
From: Organizers <organizers-bounces+john=modernjive.com(a)lists.sharedweight.net> On
Behalf Of Larry Koplik via Organizers
Sent: 18 June 2019 22:32
To: organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
Subject: Re: [Organizers] Tips for a swing workshop
Here's a video that Princeton Country Dancers created
about the buzz step swing that might be helpful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jaVSVtPRwlA
Larry Koplik
On 6/18/2019 4:01 PM, Karlsruhe Contra Dance via Organizers wrote:
HI all,
I know, we learn to swing by swinging with other experienced dancers. But my problem is a
lack of experienced dancers.
I would love to help my dancers get a bit more out of their swings the next time I have
the chance to offer a proper workshop (other than "the basics") There is
potential there.
I was thinking of possibly selling it as "swings and swing flourishes" - but
based on the level, the flourishes won't have to be terribly creative.
I have never participated in a workshop of this type. Can any of you point me to some
resources or tell me about experiences that you have had? Or other ideas?
Thanks!
Rebecca in Karlsruhe, D.
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