1. The Almost Scientific Reason
for Why We Get Dizzy
Somewhere in our ears (behind the drums but in front of the
guitar) there is fluid inside a bowl with a whole lot of hairs
sticking into it. Now if you take a bowl of soup with the right
consistency, and move the bowl around, you will notice how the
fluid stays where it is whilst the bowl moves. The hairs can feel
this movement in relation to the fluid and thus give us information
on how much we have moved. The problem is, if you if you spin
the bowl lots, the soup eventually catches up and spins with the
bowl, and when you stop the bowl, the soup keeps going! But the
hairs sense the soup is still moving and thinks that the bowl
is still spinning, when in fact its not! That is why after spinning
it can feel as if the room is still moving. It is also why you
should not play with your food.
2. How to Get Less Dizzy
The body will eventually adapt to anything it is repeatedly
exposed to. So if you spin lots, you will get used to it and experience
less dizziness. Also, try not to tilt your head to either side
whilst spinning. When you have completed your last turn, focus
your eyes on one object (do not let them just blur) and at least
you will get your bearings quicker. Trained dancers use a technique
called spotting. You let your body start to turn without your
head moving, whilst focusing on a single spot. When you can no
longer keep your head in the same places, you turn it around as
fast as you can to refocus on the same spot. It takes practice,
but eventually helps you avoid getting dizzy and can even help
you turn more.
3. A Tip for Improved Balance
Some people flail about on wobble boards. Some paddle about on
Swiss balls. Others stumble to work on stilts. I have found that
to start with, however, the low tech option is the most useful.
Simply stand on one foot until you can stand without perceptible
traffic signaling for over one minute. Then do it with a slightly
bent leg, and then progress to doing it with your eyes shut. After
a couple of months you can experiment with moving your head up
and down, side to side, moving your other limbs etc. When this
isn’t so much of a challenge you can graduate to wobble
boards and Swiss balls. Those Swiss sure do have balls. I sometimes
brush my teeth, wait for the bus and even go to the toilet standing
on one foot. Simply hours of fun. (Although only recommended for
the true gentlemen.)
Before too long you’ll notice big improvements, and the
interesting thing is it doesn’t seem to bear too much relationship
to strength. I go through periods without training where my strength
gains reverse but my balance stays as was. Balance is for life,
not just for Christmas.
4. A Tip for Connected Dancing
Here is something simple you can do to increase the connection
between you and your partner when leading modern jive and most
other partner dances. Simply make sure the leading hand is at
about the waist height or lower of the follower. I normally look
for the forearm to be about parallel with the floor or slopping
slightly downwards. I could explain why this works, but I would
rather you just try it and see for yourself. Takes some getting
used to, as most men hold their arm too high. It must be the excitement.
5. The Embrace Broken Down
The standard embrace we normally start with has the leaders
right hand on the ladies left shoulder blade, and his left hand
at her shoulder height. Followers can place their left hand on
the guys shoulder or cup his bicep, depending on which is more
comfortable, and rest their left arm on his. Elbows can stay down
and relaxed in this style, and try to always start with your weight
well over your toes. Remember, the embrace is one kind of frame
as is malleable – it will adapt and change depending on
the moves you are dancing, unlike the frame you may see in some
ballroom dances which appears to be more consistent.
6. Some Tips for Looking More
Refined on the Dance Floor
If your hand is on your partners back (in a close embrace, for
example) close your fingers so they are touching. Spread fingers
look messy and look like you are going for a grope, and they are
more likely to uncomfortably dig into your partners back.
Keep your chin up. You can still look down with your eyes, but
tilting your whole head down is no good for your posture or your
image!
If you are much taller than your partner, adjust your arms so
they are comfortable for them, but don’t compromise your
posture!
Keep your spare arm above your waist line. You don’t have
to do anything special with it, but a dangling arm can look uncontrolled
and careless.
Brush your thighs together between steps. Not a rigid rule, but
try to avoid the wet knickers look, unless you’ve got wet
knickers, in which case you should probably stop dancing until
they dry.
If you often get wet knickers, make a habit of packing a spare
pair of knickers.
7. Posture Tip for Dancers!
Are you sitting up straight? Good! So now listen. There are lots
of differing opinions on what perfect posture is and how to achieve
it. But one simple way to progress in this area is to find some
simple reference points.
A useful one I sometimes think of is ‘ears over shoulders’.
This brings your head back in line with your spine and lengthens
your neck. Do not go too far, or you get a double chin. Just so
you can feel the difference between where you should be and where
you could be, take your head too far back, and notice how far
back you can go. Now take it too far forward, then too far back
again. Do this several times very quickly, especially if you are
reading this in an open plan office. Great. You look really silly.
Kind of like a chicken.
Have you ever looked at a chicken and thought, hey, that chicken
has really good posture.?
Well. Do not waste more time staring at chickens.
8. Improve your Concentration
and Strengthen your Pelvic Floor!
The Water UK Website reckons that you can get a 10% improvement
in mental performance after drinking a glass of water ... and
feel the effects within 2 minutes! So bring along plenty of bottled
water to the Jango Intensive, and keep hydrated.
A word of warning, however. You may think, hmm, 10% improvement
with one glass of water… no doubt that would be a 20% increase
with two glasses. In fact, why dally about with it. Skull all
ten and get the 100% increase all in one go! Every two minutes.
Genius.
Well, I tried that, and it does not work. All your extra concentration
is wasted holding onto your bladder. And when you are not rushing
to the toilet, you are rushing to fill up your water bottle. Stick
to 10%. It will go further.
9. How to Perform your Best
Can you remember a time when everything flowed? You felt on balance,
you felt connected, you felt creative and contented? Well, chances
are you were not thinking about anything I have said, or anyone
else for that matter. You may not have been conscious of thinking
anything at all! Sometimes everything seems to simply click into
place and you can not be sure why.
Well, sometimes the best approach, after all the classes, tips
and tantrums, is to simply remember the state we were in when
we were dancing our best, and try to step back into it.
Before I perform I rarely concentrate on specifics that I learn
in class. I bring up a time where I think I was performing at
my best and try to recreate it in my head in as many details as
possible. The internal dialogue I had, the way I held my body,
my breathing, my thinking. Before too long I can get back into
the same state where everything flows, or at least get closer
to it than I was.
So although I send out tips like where to put your right hand
this move, where to hold your head in that one, sometimes I would
suggest to forget all that, and simply try to create a peak state
of dancing excellence. (and if you don’t think you’ve
ever had one, then I’m sure you can imagine something close!)
10. Leading from Your Body -
A Game for all the Family
To find out what “Leading with the Body”;
means in a Jango (tm) context, and in most forms of tango, try
this fun and educational game:
Rest your right arm on the table in front of you.
You are going to learn two of ways to move your fingers towards
you.
1. Slide your elbow towards you, but don't move your shoulder.
You will notice that your fingers are now closer to you. You have
moved your fingers, by leading with your arm.
Leading with your arm means your arms initiated the movement.
2. Put your arm back on the table at a comfortable distance.
Now move your right shoulder back. In other words, twist your
body to your right. This will drag your elbow along the table,
which in turn will bring your fingers closer to you. You have
moved you fingers, by leading with your body.
Leading with your body means your body initiated the movement.
Go back to the starting position, and now try these:
1. Push your hand across the table without moving your shoulders.
This is leading with your arms.
2. Push your shoulder forward but don't let your hand move. This
will cause your elbow to bend more. This is not leading. And it
looks silly. Make sure no one is looking.
3. Push your shoulder forward. Maintain an equal distance between
your shoulder and your hand. In other words, keep the angle of
your elbow the same. This will make your hand move forward. This
is leading with the body. This looks cool. Make sure somebody
is watching. Grin at them and repeat three times. This is also
considered using 'frame'.
Cool. Let’s take this lesson into a partner dance context.
Let’s say I have my hands resting on a followers shoulders,
and we're facing each other. I want her to move backwards. I can
either;
1. Push my hands away, keeping my shoulder still. This is leading
with my arms.
2. Move my shoulders forward, (step forward) whilst maintaining
the tone and shape of my arms. This is leading with the body and
using frame.
So you see, the follower is still following by virtue of the
contact you have through your arms. You are still leading with
your arms, but the movement is initiated through your body.
So what is the verdict?
That's right! This looks better, and feels better. These are
the two criteria by which I judge the effectiveness of any given
technique. Look out for other fun games in the Jango (tm) range
including; Following with Frame, Walking with Style, and Chat
Up Lines for the Verbally Challenged.
11. Dance Tip: Know Thyself!
One of the biggest problems I think dancers face is even when
they know what to do, they don’t know if they are doing
it or not! The difficulty is most apparent in beginners, and I’m
sure you’ve all seen it. You will ask all the men to step
forward on their left foot, and one or two step forward with the
right. So you repeat ‘make sure you are forward on your
left foot’ at which point these two look down at their feet,
but not budge a muscle. So you then say, looking directly at them
‘swap you feet over.’ At which point they finally
get it, and step forward on the left. In the mean time, one or
two people who were initially on their left have swapped over
too, and thus the endless cycle repeats! (Well it keeps me employed.)
Even professional dancers experience the same thing – but
in smaller details: Watching yourself back on video you might
see your posture wasn’t quite right, your shoulders tense,
the placement of your feet cumbersome. You know about all these
things, but that doesn’t mean you are doing them. Well here
are a few tips to help improve your self awareness and proprioception:
Reflect Thyself
If you can dance or practice occasionally with a mirror that
is obviously the easiest way to start to become self aware. Don’t
get in a habit of always looking over your shoulder at yourself
though! Besides dancing, check some of the important positions
and poses to ensure you are making the shapes you are trying to.
Check your posture, hip alignment, lines, foot placement and everything
else you can remember your teacher harping on about, in static
positions and then try to incorporate your own corrections whilst
moving.
Record Thyself
A warning. Watching yourself dance is like hearing your own voice.
Hardly anyone ever likes it. Even David Bowie, for example, has
said he does not like his own voice. Some of you may think that
shows good taste. Regardless, you need to be emotionally tough
to watch yourself dance, but if you do, you can learn some important
lessons about how you are actually dancing and what you might
be able to do about it.
Don’t be too disappointed though; if you watch yourself
and feel that it looks flat and lifeless, that has a lot to do
with the fact that a TV screen is flat and lifeless. You will
only ever see yourself in 2 dimensions, probably no more than
a few inches tall; remember everyone else sees you in all three
life sized dimensions, which is always more exciting.
Test Thyself
Can you do the move on your own? Take a pretzel, for example,
a fairly basic Ceroc move. Not many guys can replicate their movements
in a pretzel without a partner. Test yourself and see if you can
dance ‘your part’ on a few basic moves, and how accurate
you can be. If you can’t, start to build awareness of what
you do when you do have a partner, and see if you can replicate
it later. If you can do it alone then you will be able to improve
your technique without a partner, and you will also be much more
self-aware when there is. One of the best ways to be able to do
this is to…
Decelerate Thyself
What ballet training does is break down very complex aerial movements
into their components, and train each one in very structured and
controlled way. This is what you see if you’ve ever watched
dancers working at a barre. But you can do the same thing with
all the tricky Jango displacements, foot sweeps etc. Just practice
doing them very slowly, both with a partner and without. Piano
players will first learn to play a new piece very slowly, but
correctly, and then speed up. Most people I see practicing don’t
ever go slow enough to give themselves time to correct their mistakes.