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	<title>East Coast Swing Dance &#187; Learn How to East Coast Swing</title>
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	<description>Learn How to East Coast Swing</description>
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		<title>It&#8217;s EASY to learn how to East Coast Swing Dance for your Wedding!!!</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/its-easy-to-learn-how-to-east-coast-swing-dance-for-your-wedding/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/its-easy-to-learn-how-to-east-coast-swing-dance-for-your-wedding/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 18:18:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn to dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swing Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asheville]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ballroom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ballroom dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beginner ballroom Dance Class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance partner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dancing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DVD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[learning to dance at home]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Single Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swing dance moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wedding dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wedding reception]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Have you always wanted to learn how to ballroom or swing dance?
When was the last time it was just you, your dance partner and the music... and everything else just melted away?
Have you dreamed about floating across the dance floor?
Imagine the thrill of being asked to dance and knowing that you can!
ZeDiamond Dance Method is the beginning of your life with dance.

Start dancing now with ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set.  Watch the video clip below and see how easy it is to learn to dance at home.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bja6vYJ44uo[/youtube]

You can learn to swing dance in the comfort and privacy of your own home.
Learning to dance can be very scary for some people.  The fear of the unknown, failure or looking silly keeps many would be dancers off the dance floor and firmly seated on the couch.  But what if there was a way to learn to swing or ballroom dance in the comfort and privacy of your own living room or kitchen?

Deborah-Marie Diamond and Zeki Maviyildiz will guide you, step by step, in learning how to East Coast Swing.  They use the ZeDiamond Dance Method to help you quickly and easily learn how to swing dance.  

After dancing along with your ZeDiamond Dance Method DVD's, you will have learned how to Single Swing and East Coast Swing Dance, plus you will have a number of swing dance moves, to keep you and your partner dancing all night long. 

Want to learn to ballroom and swing dance in a special wedding dance class?
Starting in April, Deborah-Marie Diamond and Amy Barnes will be teaching Beginner Ballroom Dance Classes in Asheville, NC area.  Classes will be taught using ZeDiamond Dance Method.

The focus of the April workshop series is to teach 4 beginner ballroom dances that are appropriate for wedding receptions and parties.  

This workshop series is perfect for eager brides, reluctant grooms, excited bridal party members and family members who want to dance the night way at the wedding reception.  

Wedding Dance Workshop Series
Classes are held at The Farm Party Barn
215 Justice Ridge Rd
Candler, NC 28715
828-667-0666
Contact The Farm Party Barn for More Information

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Have you always wanted to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">learn how to ballroom or swing dance</a>?</h1>
<ul>
<li>When was the last time it was just you, your dance partner and the music&#8230; and everything else just melted away?</li>
<li>Have you dreamed about floating across the dance floor?</li>
<li>Imagine the thrill of being asked to dance and knowing that you can!</li>
</ul>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> is the beginning of your life with dance.</p>
<p>Start dancing now with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set</a>.  Watch the video clip below and see how easy it is to learn to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">dance at home.</a></p>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/its-easy-to-learn-how-to-east-coast-swing-dance-for-your-wedding/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p>
<h1>You can <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">learn to swing dance</a> in the comfort and privacy of your own home.</h1>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-297" title="ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small-212x300.jpg" alt="" width="149" height="202" />Learning to dance</a> can be very scary for some people.  The fear of the unknown, failure or looking silly keeps many would be dancers off the dance floor and firmly seated on the couch.  But what if there was a way to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">learn to swing or ballroom dance </a>in the comfort and privacy of your own living room or kitchen?</p>
<p>Deborah-Marie Diamond and <span style="font-size: small;">Zeki Maviyildiz will guide you, step by step, in <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">learning how to East Coast Swing</a>.  They use the <a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> to help you quickly and easily learn how to swing dance.  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;">After dancing along with your <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method DVD&#8217;s</a>, you will have learned how to Single Swing and East Coast Swing Dance, plus you will have a number of swing dance moves, to keep you and your partner dancing all night long. </span></p>
<h1>Want to learn to ballroom and swing dance in a special wedding dance class?</h1>
<p><span style="font-size: small;">Starting in April, Deborah-Marie Diamond and Amy Barnes will be teaching <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/learn_to_dance_classes.html" target="_self">Beginner Ballroom Dance Classes </a>in Asheville, NC area.  Classes will be taught using <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;">The focus of the April dance workshop series is to teach 4 beginner ballroom dances that are appropriate for wedding receptions and parties.  </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;">This <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/learn_to_dance_classes.html" target="_self">dance workshop series</a> is perfect for eager brides, reluctant grooms, excited bridal party members and family members who want to dance the night way at the wedding reception.  </span></p>
<h1><span style="font-size: small;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/learn_to_dance_classes.html" target="_self">Wedding Dance Workshop Series</a></span></h1>
<p>Classes are held at <a href="http://thefarmpartybarn.com/" target="_blank">The Farm Party Barn</a><br />
215 Justice Ridge Rd<br />
Candler, NC 28715<br />
828-667-0666<br />
Bev at 828-667-0666 for more information and to register for dance lessons.</p>
<p>See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p>Amy Barnes</p>
<p><a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>We were born to dance!!!</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/we-were-born-to-dance/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/we-were-born-to-dance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2010 19:42:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn to dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swing Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance steps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn Swing dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rhythm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing dancing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://eastcoastswingdance.com/?p=402</guid>
		<description><![CDATA["Yeah, but you were born dancing..."
My dance students say this when they start to lose faith in their ability to learn to dance.  I'm telling them that they can do something... they are telling me that they can't.  I tell them if I can do it, they can to.  "Yeah, but...." soon follows.  

Well, here we have it.  WE WERE ALL DANCING BABIES!!!
It is thought that starting around 25 weeks of development, babies start to hear and recognize sounds in the womb.  Even though the sound is muffled, babies can hear voices and music.  In time, babies can start responding and moving in time to music and voices.

My own baby is far more active when the room is filled with R&#038;B and Soul music.  I swear I'm starting to feel kicked in time to the music.  Bobby Brown, En Vogue and Ne-Yo have been rocking the baby today.  This baby may come out swing dancing too... well, at least recognizing the music.

Below is an article from LiveScience.  It discusses how dancing and a sense of rhythm may be something we are born with.

Babies Are Born to Dance



 
LiveScience.com livescience Staff

livescience.com – Mon Mar 15, 3:25 pm ET

"Babies love a beat, according to a new study that found dancing comes naturally to infants.

The research showed babies respond to the rhythm and tempo of music, and find it more engaging than speech.

The findings, based on a study of 120 infants between 5 months and 2 years old, suggest that humans may be born with a predisposition to move rhythmically in response to music.

"Our research suggests that it is the beat rather than other features of the music, such as the melody, that produces the response in infants," said researcher Marcel Zentner, a psychologist at the University of York in England. "We also found that the better the children were able to synchronize their movements with the music, the more they smiled."

To test babies' dancing disposition, the researchers played recordings of classical music, rhythmic beats and speech to infants, and videotaped the results. They also recruited professional ballet dancers to analyze how well the babies matched their movements to the music.

During the experiments, the babies were sitting on a parent's lap, though the adults had headphones to make sure they couldn't hear the music and were instructed not to move.

The researchers found the babies moved their arms, hands, legs, feet, torsos and heads in response to the music, much more than to speech.

Though the ability appears to be innate in humans, the researchers aren't sure why it evolved.

"It remains to be understood why humans have developed this particular predisposition," Zentner said. "One possibility is that it was a target of natural selection for music or that it has evolved for some other function that just happens to be relevant for music processing."

Zentner and his colleague Tuomas Eerola, from the Finnish Centre of Excellence in Interdisciplinary Music Research at the University of Jyvaskyla, in Finland, detailed their findings in the March 15 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."

Excerpt from Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100315/sc_livescience/babiesareborntodance

Kids, Teens and Adults must be born to dance too!
This was my favorite part of the article, "humans may be born with a predisposition to move rhythmically in response to music."  That's right, we can't fight it.  We are all dancers by birth.  So why do we struggle to learn to dance?

I'm not a scientist, but here is my theory.  Babies aren't taught to dance, they just feel the rhythm of the music and move.  In time, babies learn to stomp, clap, kick, wave their hands and move their heads.  As they learn to move and control their bodies better, they start to incorporate these movements into their dance.  Once again, nobody is teaching them, they just feel the rhythm and move.  The key to this is that they FEEL THE RHYTHM OF THE MUSIC AND MOVE.

As we grow and develop, we give up our faith in what we feel and follow our heads instead.  Our faith is in what we think.  Though the brain enjoys music, it processes it differently than our bodies did in childhood.  Our brain is analytical and starts judging.  The brain examines our movements, and compares it to the music, others dancing and everyone else in the room watching.  WE STOP FEELING THE RHYTHM AND THINK ABOUT IT INSTEAD.  OUR BODIES STOP MOVING AND OUR BRAIN STARTS JUDGING.

How do we get back to feeling the music?
ZeDiamond Dance Method is based on feeling the rhythm of music before taking your first dance step.  With ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set, you will be taken back to feeling the rhythm of the music.  Without your brain getting in the way, you will feel the music and move to the rhythm inside of you.  Exercises based in DiRRiD, will help you regain your natural sense of rhythm.  Just like a child, you will step, clap and use your voice to discover the rhythm that is innately inside of you. 

Once you've  got your groove back, then the dance steps will just flow out of you.  ZeDiamond Dance Method teaches you to move to your natural rhythm and suddenly, you are swing dancing!  You learn easy East Coast Swing Dance moves and let them flow out of you, naturally. 

Click here and watch a short video clip that lets you see how ZeDiamond Dance Method works.

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<h1 id="yn-title">&#8220;Yeah, but you were born dancing&#8230;&#8221;</h1>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-at-Worlds-Crop.JPG"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-228" title="Amy at Worlds Crop" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-at-Worlds-Crop.JPG" alt="" width="160" height="268" /></a>My dance students say this when they start to lose faith in their ability to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">learn to dance</a>.  I&#8217;m telling them that they can do something&#8230; they are telling me that they can&#8217;t.  I tell them if I can do it, they can too.  &#8220;Yeah, but&#8230;.&#8221; soon follows.  </p>
<h1>Well, here we have it.  WE WERE ALL DANCING BABIES!!!</h1>
<p>It is thought that starting around 25 weeks of development, babies start to hear and recognize sounds in the womb.  Even though the sound is muffled, babies can hear voices and music.  In time, babies can start responding and moving in time to music and voices.</p>
<p>My own baby is far more active when the room is filled with R&amp;B and Soul music.  I swear I&#8217;m starting to feel kicked in time to the music.  Bobby Brown, En Vogue and Ne-Yo have been rocking the baby today.  This baby may come out <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">swing dancing</a> too&#8230; well, at least recognizing the music.</p>
<p>Below is an article from LiveScience.  It discusses how dancing and a sense of rhythm may be something we are born with.</p>
<h1>Babies Are Born to Dance</h1>
<p><img src="http://l.yimg.com/a/i/us/nws/p/livesci_logo_73.jpg" alt="LiveScience.com" width="73" height="27" /></p>
<p><!-- end: .tools --><!-- end: .hd --></p>
<div>
<div id="yn-story-related-media">
<div id="yn-story-main-media">
<div><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Babies-hear-two-languages-regularly-their-mother39s-womb-more-open/photo//100217/photos_hl_afp/49b60e1a52653316ce7df94c4c52c630//s:/livescience/20100315/sc_livescience/babiesareborntodance"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/a/p/afp/20100217/capt.photo_1266366260910-1-0.jpg?x=213&amp;y=142&amp;xc=1&amp;yc=1&amp;wc=409&amp;hc=273&amp;q=85&amp;sig=Q6KGRRryme9RCZs8n6ZW0A--" alt="Two languages in womb makes bilingual babies: study" width="213" height="142" /> </a><cite></cite></div>
<p>LiveScience.com livescience Staff</p>
<p>livescience.com – <abbr title="2010-03-15T12:25:40-0700">Mon Mar 15, 3:25 pm ET</abbr></p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<p><!-- end .byline -->&#8220;Babies love a beat, according to a new study that found dancing comes naturally to infants.</p>
<p>The research showed babies respond to the rhythm and tempo of music, and find it more engaging than speech.</p>
<p>The findings, based on a study of 120 infants between 5 months and 2 years old, suggest that humans may be born with a predisposition to move rhythmically in response to music.</p>
<p>&#8220;Our research suggests that it is the beat rather than other features of the music, such as the melody, that produces the response in infants,&#8221; said researcher Marcel Zentner, a psychologist at the University of York in England. &#8220;We also found that the better the children were able to synchronize their movements with the music, the more they smiled.&#8221;</p>
<p>To test babies&#8217; dancing disposition, the researchers played recordings of classical music, rhythmic beats and speech to infants, and videotaped the results. They also recruited professional ballet dancers to analyze how well the babies matched their movements to the music.</p>
<p>During the experiments, the babies were sitting on a parent&#8217;s lap, though the adults had headphones to make sure they couldn&#8217;t hear the music and were instructed not to move.</p>
<p>The researchers found the babies moved their arms, hands, legs, feet, torsos and heads in response to the music, much more than to speech.</p>
<p>Though the ability appears to be innate in humans, the researchers aren&#8217;t sure why it evolved.</p>
<p>&#8220;It remains to be understood why humans have developed this particular predisposition,&#8221; Zentner said. &#8220;One possibility is that it was a target of natural selection for music or that it has evolved for some other function that just happens to be relevant for music processing.&#8221;</p>
<p>Zentner and his colleague Tuomas Eerola, from the Finnish Centre of Excellence in Interdisciplinary Music Research at the University of Jyvaskyla, in Finland, detailed their findings in the March 15 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt from Yahoo! News</p>
<p>http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100315/sc_livescience/babiesareborntodance</p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">Kids, Teens and Adults must be born to dance too!</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">This was my favorite part of the article, &#8220;humans may be born with a predisposition to move rhythmically in response to music.&#8221;  That&#8217;s right, we can&#8217;t fight it.  We are all dancers by birth.  So why do we struggle to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">learn to dance</a>?</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">I&#8217;m not a scientist, but here is my theory.  Babies aren&#8217;t taught to dance, they just feel the rhythm of the music and move.  In time, babies learn to stomp, clap, kick, wave their hands and move their heads.  As they learn to move and control their bodies better, they start to incorporate these movements into their dance.  Once again, nobody is teaching them, they just feel the rhythm and move.  The key to this is that they FEEL THE RHYTHM OF THE MUSIC AND MOVE.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">As we grow and develop, we give up our faith in what we feel and follow our heads instead.  Our faith is in what we think.  Though the brain enjoys music, it processes it differently than our bodies did in childhood.  Our brain is analytical and starts judging.  The brain examines our movements, and compares it to the music, others dancing and everyone else in the room watching.  WE STOP FEELING THE RHYTHM AND THINK ABOUT IT INSTEAD.  OUR BODIES STOP MOVING AND OUR BRAIN STARTS JUDGING.</p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">How do we get back to feeling the music?</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-297 alignright" title="ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small-212x300.jpg" alt="" width="212" height="300" /></a><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> is based on feeling the rhythm of music before taking your first dance step.  With <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set</a>, you will be taken back to feeling the rhythm of the music.  Without your brain getting in the way, you will feel the music and move to the rhythm inside of you.  Exercises based in DiRRiD, will help you regain your natural sense of rhythm.  Just like a child, you will step, clap and use your voice to discover the rhythm that is innately inside of you. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Once you&#8217;ve  got your groove back, then the dance steps will just flow out of you.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> teaches you to move to your natural rhythm and suddenly, you are swing dancing!  You <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">learn easy East Coast Swing Dance moves</a> and let them flow out of you, naturally. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_self">Click here</a> and watch a short video clip that lets you <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_self">see how ZeDiamond Dance Method works</a>.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>East Coast Swing while dancing the dance inside you.</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/east-coast-swing-while-dancing-the-dance-inside-you/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/east-coast-swing-while-dancing-the-dance-inside-you/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Mar 2010 16:22:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn to dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swing Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ballroom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ballroom dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance steps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn Swing dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[learning to dance at home]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rhythm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://eastcoastswingdance.com/?p=392</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Walk the walk... Talk the talk... Dance the dance...
There are many times that I see my life as a puzzlement.  I have been told for years that I am a walking contradiction.   

A friend in high school once told me that I act and talk in public they way everyone else acts and talks in private.  Basically, don't take it when others are bending to society's whims, they don't have your guts to stand up to it.  I can be free as a bird and as creative and artistic as I dare to be... that's why I ballroom and swing dance.

I enjoy structure.  I like rules.  I like to follow them, depend on them and understand them (even if it is just to work around them).  I like to know that there is right and wrong, action and reaction, consequences for behaviors and rewards for hitting goals.  There is nothing I love more than a good plan... that's why I ballroom and swing dance.

Do you see the dilemma?  I often wonder if  I am a creative who learned to thrive in world of structure, or am I highly structured and learned to survive in a highly creative world?  The battle of Left Brain vs. Right Brain rages on inside my head... and that's why I ballroom and swing dance. 

Traditional Ballroom Dance - Taught to the mind
Many ballroom teachers have a very analytical way of teaching which works well for analytical students.  The teacher teaches the student to use their mind to control the body, interpret music and execute specific practices of timing and technique.  Ballroom and swing dancing do have quite a bit of structure to them.  The 3 T's of timing, teamwork and technique are introduced to students at a very early stage. 

Teachers are trained using a syllabus of steps for each dance.  Where I dance, we follow the DVIDA Syllabus.  This is a very structured syllabus that breaks down dance steps into 1/8 of a turn and half beat segments.  If there is any doubt in your mind how a leader or follower executes timing or footwork, the syllabus is your point of reference. 

Once you join the ranks of competitive dancers, a syllabus can become the standard that you are judged against.  How accurate are your steps?  How true are you to the interpretation of the dance?    Did you execute all the steps and use the correct timing? 

It is a field day for the analytical mind.  There is right and wrong... rules galore... rewards for following rules and execution of requirements... when things go well on the dance floor.

There is also blame... mistakes... shame... and a loss of confidence when things don't go well on the dance floor.

Creative Dance - Taught to the body and spirit
When I was in college, I took a modern dance class.  When we went around the room and said why we signed up for the class, I said I was here to work on my spins, turns and balance so I could be a better couples dancer (hello analytical mind). 

What I took away from that class was so much more.  In this class, we concentrated on creating an emotional response from our movement.  It wasn't about who had the best turn out.  It was about capturing a feeling in your own body, expressing it through movement and sharing it with someone else.  

We used dance to tell short stories rather than emulate perfect text book form.  I also learned to use my core to move my body, not just my mind.   Your body has a very distinctive look when your movement starts with your center rather than just moving limbs with your mind.

It was a field day for the creative mind.  No right and wrong... no rules... just pure expression of a feeling or idea... when things go well on the dance floor.

It can look confusing or chaotic at times... the audience doesn't understand what you are expressing... when things go badly on the dance floor.

Dancing the Dance that is inside of you
As it turns out, Swing Dancing has a long and rich history built on rebellion.  And much of that rebellion is still carrying on today.  There is constant debate over footwork, music, timing and styling in the swing world today.  Because of this, swing dancing is still evolving at a pretty fast pace. 

ZeDiamond Dance Method is a revolutionary new way to learn how to swing dance in the comfort of your home.  ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing is the first DVD system, that I have seen, that teaches structured ballroom dance, from the body and not the mind. Teaching you to feel the music and rhythm through your body are the first lessons you learn with ZeDiamond Dance Method.  Once you can feel the music, ZeDiamond Dance Method helps you move your body to the rhythm and the dance steps just flow out of you. 

In many swing circles, dancers have come together to escape the rules of traditional ballroom dance and its syllabus.  Rules become more like guidelines as you grow and become a more experienced swing dancer. 

You learn to dance without thinking, judging or feeling shame over mistakes.  Your body and your brain stop fighting one another.  You dance the dance that is inside you with ZeDiamond Dance Method.  You feel the music flow into you and the dance steps flow out of you. 

Dancers judge their dancing based on the fun they are having, the smile on their partner's face or the clapping of onlookers.  I judge my dancing on how tired and sore I am the next day.  The more I hurt, the better time I usually had.

Social Swing Dancing allows you to dance the dance that is inside you, while maintaining the character of the dance.  Let your creative and structured self rejoice!  You can be sexy or playful or larger than life while still swing dancing with your partner.

ZeDiamond Dance Method is one way to learn to East Coast Swing Dance that will not only teach you basic swing steps and footwork, but will also help you find the creative dance inside of you that you can share with a partner. 

Then you can start worrying about important things... Why is your partner smiling?

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Walk the walk&#8230; Talk the talk&#8230; Dance the dance&#8230;</h1>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-and-Jason-Hustle-small.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-330" title="Amy and Jason Hustle small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-and-Jason-Hustle-small-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a>There are many times that I see my life as a puzzlement.  I have been told for years that I am a walking contradiction.   </p>
<p>A friend in high school once told me that I act and talk in public they way everyone else acts and talks in private.  Basically, don&#8217;t take it when others are bending to society&#8217;s whims, they don&#8217;t have your guts to stand up to it.  I can be free as a bird and as creative and artistic as I dare to be&#8230; that&#8217;s why I <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ballroom and swing dance</a>.</p>
<p>I enjoy structure.  I like rules.  I like to follow them, depend on them and understand them (even if it is just to work around them).  I like to know that there is right and wrong, action and reaction, consequences for behaviors and rewards for hitting goals.  There is nothing I love more than a good plan&#8230; that&#8217;s why I <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ballroom and swing dance</a>.</p>
<p>Do you see the dilemma?  I often wonder if  I am a creative who learned to thrive in world of structure, or am I highly structured and learned to survive in a highly creative world?  The battle of Left Brain vs. Right Brain rages on inside my head&#8230; and that&#8217;s why I <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ballroom and swing dance</a>. </p>
<h1>Traditional Ballroom Dance &#8211; Taught to the mind</h1>
<p>Many ballroom teachers have a very analytical way of teaching which works well for analytical students.  The teacher teaches the student to use their mind to control the body, interpret music and execute specific practices of timing and technique.  Ballroom and swing dancing do have quite a bit of structure to them.  The 3 T&#8217;s of timing, teamwork and technique are introduced to students at a very early stage. </p>
<p>Teachers are trained using a syllabus of steps for each dance.  Where I dance, we follow the DVIDA Syllabus.  This is a very structured syllabus that breaks down dance steps into 1/8 of a turn and half beat segments.  If there is any doubt in your mind how a leader or follower executes timing or footwork, the syllabus is your point of reference. </p>
<p>Once you join the ranks of competitive dancers, a syllabus can become the standard that you are judged against.  How accurate are your steps?  How true are you to the interpretation of the dance?    Did you execute all the steps and use the correct timing? </p>
<p>It is a field day for the analytical mind.  There is right and wrong&#8230; rules galore&#8230; rewards for following rules and execution of requirements&#8230; when things go well on the dance floor.</p>
<p>There is also blame&#8230; mistakes&#8230; shame&#8230; and a loss of confidence when things don&#8217;t go well on the dance floor.</p>
<h1>Creative Dance &#8211; Taught to the body and spirit</h1>
<p>When I was in college, I took a modern dance class.  When we went around the room and said why we signed up for the class, I said I was here to work on my spins, turns and balance so I could be a better couples dancer (hello analytical mind). </p>
<p>What I took away from that class was so much more.  In this class, we concentrated on creating an emotional response from our movement.  It wasn&#8217;t about who had the best turn out.  It was about capturing a feeling in your own body, expressing it through movement and sharing it with someone else.  </p>
<p>We used dance to tell short stories rather than emulate perfect text book form.  I also learned to use my core to move my body, not just my mind.   Your body has a very distinctive look when your movement starts with your center rather than just moving limbs with your mind.</p>
<p>It was a field day for the creative mind.  No right and wrong&#8230; no rules&#8230; just pure expression of a feeling or idea&#8230; when things go well on the dance floor.</p>
<p>It can look confusing or chaotic at times&#8230; the audience doesn&#8217;t understand what you are expressing&#8230; when things go badly on the dance floor.</p>
<h1>Dancing the Dance that is inside of you</h1>
<p>As it turns out, <a href="http://http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_self">Swing Dancing</a> has a long and rich history built on rebellion.  And much of that rebellion is still carrying on today.  There is constant debate over footwork, music, timing and styling in the swing world today.  Because of this, <a href="http://http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_self">swing dancing</a> is still evolving at a pretty fast pace. </p>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-297" title="ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small-212x300.jpg" alt="" width="160" height="225" /></a><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> is a revolutionary new way to learn how to swing dance in the comfort of your home.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing</a> is the first DVD system, that I have seen, that teaches structured ballroom dance, from the body and not the mind. Teaching you to feel the music and rhythm through your body are the first lessons you learn with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>.  Once you can feel the music, <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> helps you move your body to the rhythm and the dance steps just flow out of you. </p>
<p>In many swing circles, dancers have come together to escape the rules of traditional ballroom dance and its syllabus.  Rules become more like guidelines as you grow and become a more experienced swing dancer. </p>
<p>You learn to dance without thinking, judging or feeling shame over mistakes.  Your body and your brain stop fighting one another.  You dance the dance that is inside you with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>.  You feel the music flow into you and the dance steps flow out of you. </p>
<p>Dancers judge their dancing based on the fun they are having, the smile on their partner&#8217;s face or the clapping of onlookers.  I judge my dancing on how tired and sore I am the next day.  The more I hurt, the better time I usually had.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">Social Swing Dancing</a> allows you to dance the dance that is inside you, while maintaining the character of the dance.  Let your creative and structured self rejoice!  You can be sexy or playful or larger than life while still <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">swing dancing</a> with your partner.</p>
<p><a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> is one way to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">learn to East Coast Swing Dance</a> that will not only teach you basic swing steps and footwork, but will also help you find the creative dance inside of you that you can share with a partner. </p>
<p>Then you can start worrying about important things, like&#8230; Why is my partner smiling?</p>
<p>See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Teach your kids how to East Coast Swing</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/teach-your-kids-how-to-east-coast-swing/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/teach-your-kids-how-to-east-coast-swing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Mar 2010 23:27:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn to dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swing Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asheville]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ballroom dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance steps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jitterbug]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to Dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn How to East Coast Swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Learn Swing dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[learning to dance at home]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rhythm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing dancer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing dancing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://eastcoastswingdance.com/?p=369</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Snow day in Asheville, NC
I'm not sure what the weather is like at your house, but in Asheville, NC it is snowing.  That may not sound like a big deal... but in this small mountain town, everything comes to a grinding halt.  Asheville will even come to halt without the snow, we just have to have a weather report calling for snow to move into the area.  With this winter being one of Asheville's coldest and snowiest, our school age children have had many canceled classes and snow days.

So today, like many snow days, parents and their children are caught at home to wait it out.  So what are we going to do today?  What family activity will bring us all closer together, be fun for everyone and hopefully burn off some of the extra energy we are carrying around?  Let's all learn to dance together!

What are we going to do now?
Some of my fondest childhood memories are of my mother trying to teach my sister and I to dance in our living room.  Cha cha, Tango, Polka and Jitterbug/East Coast Swing were great past times for cold and snowy days.  My mom grew-up in a family that socially ballroom danced.  She married a man who did not.  So many hours and snow days were spent teaching my sister and I to dance so she would have someone to dance with.  This was a special bonding time for the three of us, filled with giggles, music and joy.   It was by no means quality dancing... but it was quality time we spent together.

You can teach your children to dance!  You can start today!  Peel yourself away from the computer and pull the iPods earbuds out of your children's ears and get moving.  Below is an excerpt from Teach Kids How.  Teach Kids How is an website full of topics and ideas for parents who wish to teach their children something new.  Follow these few guidelines and you and your children will be up and dancing with the music in no time.

Teach Your Child How to Dance
"Dancing has been around since the beginning of time. Before writing was invented people use to tell storied through dance, seek rain through dance, celebrate marriage through dance. In even earlier dates dance was used to heal the sick or wounded and break an evil curse that was placed on a tribe or village member.

Since that time the amount of dances and the reasons for dancing that has evolved is remarkable and difficult for anyone to keep up with, from the Salsa to the Waltz, from the Smurf to the Electric slide, the Mambo and even the Cha-Cha. There are so many it’s enough to make the common person feel overwhelmed and completely out of style.

But the benefits of dancing can be exceptional for your overall health and wellness. What other exercise can you both have dun doing and gain exceptional benefits to your health? Teaching your children to dance can be beneficial to you both in physical health, mental connectivity, and just having the ability to dance when a celebration occurs.

Preschool
When your children are younger than elementary age introducing them to dance can be as simple as allowing them to dance free verse. When anyone begins to dance, allowing the rhythm of music to sweep through his or her body is the first step to learning how to dance. Simply put some good dance music on and dance together, you’ll both have fun doing it anyway.

Instead of “teaching" your child how to dance and making them fuse about learning, try playing follow the leader with your child. When children are playing a game or not thinking they are actually learning something, they will pick up on the instruction so much easier. There’s something about playing a game that gets kids motivated, as opposed to actually learning something.

Main points to address:

Allow your children to dance free verse.
Play follow the leader while dancing.
Grades K-6th
In most areas there are places that provide dance classes to anyone willing to learn. Many classes will teach a variety of dances including ballroom, break dance, hip-hop, tap, country line dancing and other types of dance. This could be a class that you and your child can take and learn together. When parents are attempting to learn something new this will get your child enthusiastic about their learning process. Obtain local information about local dance events or presentations. You can also contact local dance studios to sit in and watch the instruction and type of dance being taught if you you’d like to review their instructions first.

If dance classes are not available in your area or you’re not interested in taking them try purchasing dance videos and/or dance books. They’ll show you step-by-step instructions on that dance that you or your child is looking to learn. Or use the simple one-two, one-two way you learned how to dance. Make the process fun with a few twists and twirls. The bottom line is to fun with your child, while they’re learning.

Main points to address:

Take classes together.
Buy dance videos and books.
Take them to dance studios or dancing events."
Excerpt by Teach Kids How from "Teach Your Child How to Dance"
http://www.teachkidshow.com/teach-your-child-how-to-dance/

All kids love to dance 
My nephews remind me of this everytime I see them.  They dance in the their car seats, the grocery store, Target and everywhere else that happens to have music playing in the back ground.  They will even bob their heads in time to the music I hum when I get a song stuck in my head.  At this point, in their preschool lives, dancing is a game they play with the world around them. 

As they grow, children have two ways to learn that involve their parents.  One experience is to learn something from the parent.  The child is the "novice" and the parent is the teacher or "expert" in this experience.  The other experience is to learn something with the parent.  The child and the parent are both "novices" and are working through the learning process together following an outside expert.   

Learning to dance with your child is not only a great educational experience, but can also be bonding experience as well.  ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing is a simple and easy way for children and adults to learn to dance together.  Since this teaching method is available on DVD, there is no need to venture out in the cold and snow to take dance lessons.  Order ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set and pop it in the DVD player during your next snow day.  You and your children can learn to dance the East Coast Swing together in the comfort of your home.  Preschool age children will enjoy disc 1 with the rhythm practice and stomp, clap and singing exercises that help develop an inner sense of rhythm.  School age children will enjoy both discs as they learn swing dance steps and start dancing with you.  Click here to watch a video clip and see how ZeDiamond Dance Method could work for you. 

Learning how to dance the East Coast Swing together, can start your children (and you as well) on a life long journey through the world of dance.  Take your first dance steps in the comfort of your own home with ZeDiamond Dance Method.  Who knows where your dancing feet will take you next.

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason-in-Indy.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-79 alignleft" title="Amy and Jason in Indy" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason-in-Indy-252x300.jpg" alt="" width="168" height="183" /></a>Snow day in Asheville, NC</h1>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure what the weather is like at your house, but in Asheville, NC it is snowing.  That may not sound like a big deal&#8230; but in this small mountain town, everything comes to a grinding halt.  Asheville will even come to halt without the snow, we just have to have a weather report calling for snow to move into the area.  With this winter being one of Asheville&#8217;s coldest and snowiest, our school age children have had many canceled classes and snow days.</p>
<p>So today, like many snow days, parents and their children are caught at home to wait it out.  So what are we going to do today?  What family activity will bring us all closer together, be fun for everyone and hopefully burn off some of the extra energy we are carrying around?  <a href="http://http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">Let&#8217;s all learn to dance together</a>!</p>
<h1>What are we going to do now?</h1>
<p>Some of my fondest childhood memories are of my mother trying to teach my sister and I to dance in our living room.  Cha cha, Tango, Polka and <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">Jitterbug/East Coast Swing</a> were great past times for cold and snowy days.  My mom grew-up in a family that <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">socially ballroom danced</a>.  She married a man who did not.  So many hours and snow days were spent teaching my sister and I to dance so she would have someone to dance with.  This was a special bonding time for the three of us, filled with giggles, music and joy.   It was by no means quality dancing&#8230; but it was quality time we spent together.</p>
<p>You can teach your children to dance!  You can start today!  Peel yourself away from the computer and pull the iPods earbuds out of your children&#8217;s ears and get moving.  Below is an excerpt from Teach Kids How.  Teach Kids How is an website full of topics and ideas for parents who wish to teach their children something new.  Follow these few guidelines and you and your children will be up and dancing with the music in no time.</p>
<h1>Teach Your Child How to Dance</h1>
<p>&#8220;Dancing has been around since the beginning of time. Before writing was invented people use to tell storied through dance, seek rain through dance, celebrate marriage through dance. In even earlier dates dance was used to heal the sick or wounded and break an evil curse that was placed on a tribe or village member.</p>
<p>Since that time the amount of dances and the reasons for dancing that has evolved is remarkable and difficult for anyone to keep up with, from the Salsa to the Waltz, from the Smurf to the Electric slide, the Mambo and even the Cha-Cha. There are so many it’s enough to make the common person feel overwhelmed and completely out of style.</p>
<p>But the benefits of dancing can be exceptional for your overall health and wellness. What other exercise can you both have dun doing and gain exceptional benefits to your health? Teaching your children to dance can be beneficial to you both in physical health, mental connectivity, and just having the ability to dance when a celebration occurs.</p>
<p><strong>Preschool</strong><br />
When your children are younger than elementary age introducing them to dance can be as simple as allowing them to dance free verse. When anyone begins to dance, allowing the rhythm of music to sweep through his or her body is the first step to learning how to dance. Simply put some good dance music on and dance together, you’ll both have fun doing it anyway.</p>
<p>Instead of “teaching&#8221; your child how to dance and making them fuse about learning, try playing follow the leader with your child. When children are playing a game or not thinking they are actually learning something, they will pick up on the instruction so much easier. There’s something about playing a game that gets kids motivated, as opposed to actually learning something.</p>
<p><strong>Main points to address:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Allow your children to dance free verse.</li>
<li>Play follow the leader while dancing.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Grades K-6th</strong><br />
In most areas there are places that provide dance classes to anyone willing to learn. Many classes will teach a variety of dances including ballroom, break dance, hip-hop, tap, country line dancing and other types of dance. This could be a class that you and your child can take and learn together. When parents are attempting to learn something new this will get your child enthusiastic about their learning process. Obtain local information about local dance events or presentations. You can also contact local dance studios to sit in and watch the instruction and type of dance being taught if you you’d like to review their instructions first.</p>
<p>If dance classes are not available in your area or you’re not interested in taking them try purchasing dance videos and/or dance books. They’ll show you step-by-step instructions on that dance that you or your child is looking to learn. Or use the simple one-two, one-two way you learned how to dance. Make the process fun with a few twists and twirls. The bottom line is to fun with your child, while they’re learning.</p>
<p><strong>Main points to address:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Take classes together.</li>
<li>Buy dance videos and books.</li>
<li>Take them to dance studios or dancing events.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt by Teach Kids How from &#8220;Teach Your Child How to Dance&#8221;<br />
<a href="http://www.teachkidshow.com/teach-your-child-how-to-dance/">http://www.teachkidshow.com/teach-your-child-how-to-dance/</a></p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">All kids love to dance </h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">My nephews remind me of this everytime I see them.  They dance in the their car seats, the grocery store, Target and everywhere else that happens to have music playing in the back ground.  They will even bob their heads in time to the music I hum when I get a song stuck in my head.  At this point, in their preschool lives, dancing is a game they play with the world around them. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">As they grow, children have two ways to learn that involve their parents.  One experience is to learn something from the parent.  The child is the &#8220;novice&#8221; and the parent is the teacher or &#8220;expert&#8221; in this experience.  The other experience is to learn something with the parent.  The child and the parent are both &#8220;novices&#8221; and are working through the learning process together following an outside expert.   </p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small.jpg"></a><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-297" title="ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_small-212x300.jpg" alt="" width="212" height="300" /></a>Learning to dance with your child is not only a great educational experience, but can also be bonding experience as well.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing </a>is a simple and easy way for children and adults to learn to dance together.  Since this teaching method is available on <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">DVD</a>, there is no need to venture out in the cold and snow to take dance lessons.  Order <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD </a>set and pop it in the DVD player during your next snow day.  You and your children can learn to dance the <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_self">East Coast Swing</a> together in the comfort of your home.  Preschool age children will enjoy disc 1 with the rhythm practice and stomp, clap and singing exercises that help develop an inner sense of rhythm.  School age children will enjoy both discs as they learn swing dance steps and start dancing with you.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html">Click here</a> to watch a video clip and see how <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> could work for you. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Learning how to dance the East Coast Swing together, can start your children (and you as well) on a life long journey through the world of dance.  Take your first dance steps in the comfort of your own home with <a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>.  Who knows where your dancing feet will take you next.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
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		<title>What Will You Wear to the Ball?  Swing Party?  Ballroom Dance?</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/what-will-you-wear-to-the-ball-swing-party-ballroom-dance/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/what-will-you-wear-to-the-ball-swing-party-ballroom-dance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 21:42:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dance Etiquette]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[An hour or so before we need to leave, I cry from the closet, "Honey, what are we going to wear?"

You can almost hear the eyes rolling in my husbands head.  "Whatever you want," is the response I get on most days, which really doesn't help me that much.  Without fail, the holy grail of outfits is either wet and still in the washer or dry, but lost somewhere in a pile of dirty clothes.

Now mind you, I am sure I make this a lot harder than it needs to be.  My husband and I are one of those "Matchy Matchy" couples.  We are our own accessories.  You will rarely see one of us in jeans and the other in dress pants.  We dress at the same level of formality and usually in the same color scheme.  We do have matching shirts and for the shirts that don't match, my husband has ties that match my shirts. 

So why am I a mess?  With pregnancy and growing bellies comes a whole new outlook on wardrobing.  My wardrobe has also gotten much smaller in the past weeks.  I don't fit in many of our matching outfits anymore.  Plus, different events call for different levels of formality in dressing.   You thought learning to dance was the hard part?  Finding the right outfit to wear to the dance is the next challenge.

As you enter the world of ballroom and swing dance, you will notice that not all events have the same level of formality or dress code.  Gala Balls have a different dress code than practice parties.  Theme parties and dances (WHICH I LOVE) require a little more thought and preparation than weeknight group classes.  Below is an excerpt from "Elements of Dance Etiquette" by Aria Nosratinia.   Aria has provided a wonderful guide to the various levels of formality that you find in the dance world.  Aria has also provided tips on dressing for comfort and safety... a must for all dancers

What to Wear?Protocol: "Dancing has its own culture. If you want to join a group of dancers and enjoy their company, it is a good idea to follow the accepted costums of their dance group. One of the ways you get accepted into a group is by the way you're dressed.
The more formal the dance, the more formal the outfit. For example, if you are invited to a formal charity ball, anything less than a tuxedo for men or ball gown for women would be inappropriate. On the other hand, at a dance lesson at your local studio, there is usually no need to dress formally.

This is not as hard as it may seem; a little common sense goes a long way. Also, if in doubt, follow the crowd! See what others do and follow suit. If all else fails, you can always ask the dance organizers about the dress code.

Below I give a guideline and explanation for dress code, which you may see on invitations and announcements, as well as a general idea of what to wear at different dance venues.

White tie: White tie is the most formal category of dressing. For the gentleman, it means a black tailcoat with matching trousers trimmed by ribbon of braid or satin on the outside of each trouser leg, a white pique' tie, white pique' single or double-breasted vest, and a wing-collar shirt with a stiff pique' front. White gloves are nice optional accessories for gentlemen. The lady appears in a ball gown, which is an evening dress with a full skirt, possibly with open back and low neck line. Elbow-length gloves are a nice addition for the lady.
 Black tie: Gentlemen in black tuxedo coat, trousers trimmed with satin ribbon along the outside of the legs, cummerband and bow tie. The phrase ``black tie'' does not refer to the color of the tie. In fact colorful ties (with matching cummerbands) are very popular. Ladies appear in ball gowns.
 Black tie optional: Same as above, except gentlemen have the option of wearing a regular suit with a tie (bow tie preferred), and ladies wear a cocktail gown or dinner dress. Long to full-length skirts are preferred; short skirts are not recommended.
 Formal: Gentlemen in suit and tie (nowadays a sport coat is often an acceptable replacement for a full suit), ladies in cocktail gown or evening dress.
 Semi-formal: Gentlemen in dress slacks with dress shirt and tie, jacket is optional. Other options include a vest or a sweater that shows the tie. At the lower end of formality, these events can be attended without a tie, e.g. with a turtleneck and jacket. Ladies in evening dress or dinner dress, but other chic outfits are also acceptable (like flowing pants, etc.)
 Dressy Casual: Applies to most practice dances, workshops, and dance lessons. Gentlemen can wear coton slacks with solid color T-shirt, turtleneck, mock turtleneck, or polo shirt. Ladies have a much wider set of clothing options. Use your imagination and sense of fashion. In general this is a conservative and toned-down appearance that has grown increasingly popular on the dance floors. Don't forget your dance shoes!
 Country/Western: Country western attire has variations across the country, but generally it is acceptable to go in blue or black jeans (not stone-washed) and cowboy boots. Make sure that the boots will not mark the dance floor. If you wear a hat, it may be a good idea to take it off when going on the floor. Note that country western folks can be very sensitive about their hats. It is improper to touch or otherwise handle someone's hat, even if it sits on a table. For a lady to pick up and put on a gentleman's hat is considered very flirtatious.
 Milongas: (Argentine Tango) For both ladies and gentlemen, black or dark themes are preferred.
 Latin: This refers to venues that specialize in Salsa, Merengue, Cumbia, etc. For gentlemen, any button-up shirt, solid T-shirt or mock turtleneck, dress slacks, and dance shoes. Jackets are nice, but a vest can be even more stylish. Unlike most other dance venues, bright and colorful outfits for gentlemen are acceptable, although dark themes are more common. Ladies can (and often do) wear sexy outfits: both short skirts and longer slit skirts are popular. Low necklines and exposed midriffs are not uncommon.
 Swing: There are no strict rules for swing outfits. Both the Gentleman and the Lady wear outfits that are reasonably neat and chic, although often not very formal. Many types of swing are fast-paced and athletic, so wearing suitable clothing is essential. For example, the Lady would be well advised to stay away from short, tight skirts. See also the next section on Comfort and Safety. A cute trend, especially in Lindy Hop circles, is to wear vintage outfits from the 1930's and 40's. But this is not done everywhere and is not at all a requirement.
Comfort and safety:Wear clothing that makes it easy and enjoyable to dance, both for yourself and your partner.

Regardless of how informal the dance is, always wear dance shoes. Do not wear sneakers or other shoes with rubber or spongy soles. They can stick to the floor during turns and spins and cause ankle and knee injuries.
 Avoid sleeveless shirts and strapped dresses, especially for active dancing: It is not pleasant to have to touch the damp skin of a partner.
 Sleeves that are baggy or cut low in the armpit are not a good idea, especially in Latin and swing dancing, because dancers need access to partner's back, and hands may get caught in baggy sleeves.
 Accessories like big rings, watches, brooches, loose/long necklaces, and big belt buckles can be dangerous. They can catch in partner's clothing, scratch and bruise.
 Gentlemen: if you have no place to leave your keys and loose change, carry them in the *left* pocket of your trousers. This makes it less likely to bruise your partner.
 Long hair should be put up or tied in a pony tail. It is difficult to get into closed dance position when the lady has long flowing hair (hair gets caught in gentleman's right hand). It is also not fun to be hit in the face with flying hair during turns and spins. "
Excerpt from "Elements of Dance Etiquette" byAria Nosratinia
http://www.utdallas.edu/~aria/dance/etiquette.html#Groom 

The Excuse to get Dressed-Up
Many times, people learn to dance so they have an excuse to get dressed-up and get out of the house.  Whether it is "date night" for a couple, a way to meet local single people in your community, or just an excuse to wear fabulous clothes, learning to dance can open all kinds of social doors as well as wardrobe and closet doors for you too. 

I know there are people out there that just don't want to get dressed up.  They are content to wear sweat pants, dirty jeans, track suits, or yoga wear 24/7.  Many use the lack of clothing in their closets as a reason not to take dance classes or learn how to dance.  Just because everyone is wearing a ballgown in the movies, doesn't mean everyone wears a ballgown to the Friday night dance.  Expensive costumes are not required to enjoy yourself out on the dance floor.

With ZeDiamond Dance Method, you don't need to worry about what you are going to wear.  With ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set, you will be learning to swing dance in the privacy of your own home.  You can wear what ever you feel most comfortable in.  Socks, Pajamas, ratty old chinos, and denim shirts are perfect for learning how to swing dance at home.  Once you gain confidence in you new found dance skills, you may feel more comfortable getting a little spruced up and going out to a swing party or ballroom dance.

Click here to watch a video clip from ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing.  The students in the class are college kids and are dressed as such.  Do you think they are going to let a little thing like clothing come between them and good time out swing dancing with friends?  I think not.  You should not either.

So ignore the wet and dirty clothing, like I have.  Find a clean pair of black pants, a bright colored shirt and go out and have a great time.  Even though I learned to ballroom dance just so I had an excuse to wear a ballgown, I am lucky if I wear my ballgown twice a year.  But my black swing pants have taken me everywhere else I have wanted to go dancing in Asheville, NC and all over the country. 

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>An hour or so before we need to leave, I cry from the closet, &#8220;Honey, what are we going to wear?&#8221;</h1>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason1.JPG"><img class="alignleft" title="Amy and Jason" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason1-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a></p>
<p>You can almost hear the eyes rolling in my husbands head.  &#8220;Whatever you want,&#8221; is the response I get on most days, which really doesn&#8217;t help me that much.  Without fail, the holy grail of outfits is either wet and still in the washer or dry, but lost somewhere in a pile of dirty clothes.</p>
<p>Now mind you, I am sure I make this a lot harder than it needs to be.  My husband and I are one of those &#8220;Matchy Matchy&#8221; couples.  We are our own accessories.  You will rarely see one of us in jeans and the other in dress pants.  We dress at the same level of formality and usually in the same color scheme.  We do have matching shirts and for the shirts that don&#8217;t match, my husband has ties that match my shirts. </p>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-and-Jason-Hustle-small.jpg"><img class="alignright" title="Amy and Jason Hustle small" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-and-Jason-Hustle-small.jpg" alt="" width="203" height="270" /></a>So why am I a mess?  With pregnancy and growing bellies comes a whole new outlook on wardrobing.  My wardrobe has also gotten much smaller in the past weeks.  I don&#8217;t fit in many of our matching outfits anymore.  Plus, different events call for different levels of formality in dressing.   You thought learning to dance was the hard part?  Finding the right outfit to wear to the dance is the next challenge.</p>
<p>As you enter the world of ballroom and swing dance, you will notice that not all events have the same level of formality or dress code.  Gala Balls have a different dress code than practice parties.  Theme parties and dances (WHICH I LOVE) require a little more thought and preparation than weeknight group classes.  Below is an excerpt from &#8220;Elements of Dance Etiquette&#8221; by Aria Nosratinia.   Aria has provided a wonderful guide to the various levels of formality that you find in the dance world.  Aria has also provided tips on dressing for comfort and safety&#8230; a must for all dancers</p>
<h1><a name="Clothing">What to Wear?</a></h1>
<h4><a name="Protocol">Protocol: </a></h4>
<div>&#8220;Dancing has its own culture. If you want to join a group of dancers and enjoy their company, it is a good idea to follow the accepted costums of their dance group. One of the ways you get accepted into a group is by the way you&#8217;re dressed.</div>
<p>The more formal the dance, the more formal the outfit. For example, if you are invited to a formal charity ball, anything less than a tuxedo for men or ball gown for women would be inappropriate. On the other hand, at a dance lesson at your local studio, there is usually no need to dress formally.</p>
<p>This is not as hard as it may seem; a little common sense goes a long way. Also, if in doubt, follow the crowd! See what others do and follow suit. If all else fails, you can always ask the dance organizers about the dress code.</p>
<p>Below I give a guideline and explanation for dress code, which you may see on invitations and announcements, as well as a general idea of what to wear at different dance venues.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>White tie: </strong>White tie is the most formal category of dressing. For the gentleman, it means a black tailcoat with matching trousers trimmed by ribbon of braid or satin on the outside of each trouser leg, a white pique&#8217; tie, white pique&#8217; single or double-breasted vest, and a wing-collar shirt with a stiff pique&#8217; front. White gloves are nice optional accessories for gentlemen. The lady appears in a ball gown, which is an evening dress with a full skirt, possibly with open back and low neck line. Elbow-length gloves are a nice addition for the lady.</li>
<li> <strong>Black tie: </strong>Gentlemen in black tuxedo coat, trousers trimmed with satin ribbon along the outside of the legs, cummerband and bow tie. The phrase &#8220;black tie&#8221; does not refer to the color of the tie. In fact colorful ties (with matching cummerbands) are very popular. Ladies appear in ball gowns.</li>
<li> <strong>Black tie optional: </strong>Same as above, except gentlemen have the option of wearing a regular suit with a tie (bow tie preferred), and ladies wear a cocktail gown or dinner dress. Long to full-length skirts are preferred; short skirts are not recommended.</li>
<li> <strong>Formal: </strong>Gentlemen in suit and tie (nowadays a sport coat is often an acceptable replacement for a full suit), ladies in cocktail gown or evening dress.</li>
<li> <strong>Semi-formal: </strong>Gentlemen in dress slacks with dress shirt and tie, jacket is optional. Other options include a vest or a sweater that shows the tie. At the lower end of formality, these events can be attended without a tie, e.g. with a turtleneck and jacket. Ladies in evening dress or dinner dress, but other chic outfits are also acceptable (like flowing pants, etc.)</li>
<li> <strong>Dressy Casual: </strong>Applies to most practice dances, workshops, and dance lessons. Gentlemen can wear coton slacks with solid color T-shirt, turtleneck, mock turtleneck, or polo shirt. Ladies have a much wider set of clothing options. Use your imagination and sense of fashion. In general this is a conservative and toned-down appearance that has grown increasingly popular on the dance floors. Don&#8217;t forget your dance shoes!</li>
<li> <strong>Country/Western: </strong>Country western attire has variations across the country, but generally it is acceptable to go in blue or black jeans (not stone-washed) and cowboy boots. Make sure that the boots will not mark the dance floor. If you wear a hat, it may be a good idea to take it off when going on the floor. Note that country western folks can be very sensitive about their hats. It is improper to touch or otherwise handle someone&#8217;s hat, even if it sits on a table. For a lady to pick up and put on a gentleman&#8217;s hat is considered very flirtatious.</li>
<li> <strong>Milongas: </strong>(Argentine Tango) For both ladies and gentlemen, black or dark themes are preferred.</li>
<li> <strong>Latin: </strong>This refers to venues that specialize in Salsa, Merengue, Cumbia, etc. For gentlemen, any button-up shirt, solid T-shirt or mock turtleneck, dress slacks, and dance shoes. Jackets are nice, but a vest can be even more stylish. Unlike most other dance venues, bright and colorful outfits for gentlemen are acceptable, although dark themes are more common. Ladies can (and often do) wear sexy outfits: both short skirts and longer slit skirts are popular. Low necklines and exposed midriffs are not uncommon.</li>
<li> <strong>Swing: </strong>There are no strict rules for swing outfits. Both the Gentleman and the Lady wear outfits that are reasonably neat and chic, although often not very formal. Many types of swing are fast-paced and athletic, so wearing suitable clothing is essential. For example, the Lady would be well advised to stay away from short, tight skirts. See also the next section on Comfort and Safety. A cute trend, especially in Lindy Hop circles, is to wear vintage outfits from the 1930&#8217;s and 40&#8217;s. But this is not done everywhere and is not at all a requirement.</li>
</ul>
<h4><a name="Comfort">Comfort and safety:</a></h4>
<p>Wear clothing that makes it easy and enjoyable to dance, both for yourself and your partner.</p>
<ul>
<li>Regardless of how informal the dance is, always wear dance shoes. Do not wear sneakers or other shoes with rubber or spongy soles. They can stick to the floor during turns and spins and cause ankle and knee injuries.</li>
<li> Avoid sleeveless shirts and strapped dresses, especially for active dancing: It is not pleasant to have to touch the damp skin of a partner.</li>
<li> Sleeves that are baggy or cut low in the armpit are not a good idea, especially in Latin and swing dancing, because dancers need access to partner&#8217;s back, and hands may get caught in baggy sleeves.</li>
<li> Accessories like big rings, watches, brooches, loose/long necklaces, and big belt buckles can be dangerous. They can catch in partner&#8217;s clothing, scratch and bruise.</li>
<li> Gentlemen: if you have no place to leave your keys and loose change, carry them in the *left* pocket of your trousers. This makes it less likely to bruise your partner.</li>
<li> Long hair should be put up or tied in a pony tail. It is difficult to get into closed dance position when the lady has long flowing hair (hair gets caught in gentleman&#8217;s right hand). It is also not fun to be hit in the face with flying hair during turns and spins. &#8220;</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt from &#8221;Elements of Dance Etiquette&#8221; byAria Nosratinia<br />
<a href="http://www.utdallas.edu/~aria/dance/etiquette.html#Groom">http://www.utdallas.edu/~aria/dance/etiquette.html#Groom</a> </p>
<h1>The Excuse to get Dressed-Up</h1>
<p>Many times, people learn to dance so they have an excuse to get dressed-up and get out of the house.  Whether it is &#8220;date night&#8221; for a couple, a way to meet local single people in your community, or just an excuse to wear fabulous clothes, learning to dance can open all kinds of social doors as well as wardrobe and closet doors for you too. </p>
<p>I know there are people out there that just don&#8217;t want to get dressed up.  They are content to wear sweat pants, dirty jeans, track suits, or yoga wear 24/7.  Many use the lack of clothing in their closets as a reason not to take dance classes or learn how to dance.  Just because everyone is wearing a ballgown in the movies, doesn&#8217;t mean everyone wears a ballgown to the Friday night dance.  Expensive costumes are not required to enjoy yourself out on the dance floor.</p>
<p><a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_blog.jpg"><img class="alignleft" title="Learn How to East Coast Swing" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ZeDiamond_finalFrontcover_blog.jpg" alt="Learn How to East Coast Swing" width="140" height="197" /></a>With <a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>, you don&#8217;t need to worry about what you are going to wear.  With <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing 2 DVD set</a>, you will be learning to swing dance in the privacy of your own home.  You can wear what ever you feel most comfortable in.  Socks, Pajamas, ratty old chinos, and denim shirts are perfect for <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">learning how to swing dance at home</a>.  Once you gain confidence in you new found dance skills, you may feel more comfortable getting a little spruced up and going out to a swing party or ballroom dance.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_self">Click here</a> to watch a video clip from <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method Learn the East Coast Swing</a>.  The students in the class are college kids and are dressed as such.  Do you think they are going to let a little thing like clothing come between them and good time out swing dancing with friends?  I think not.  You should not either.</p>
<p>So ignore the wet and dirty clothing, like I have.  Find a clean pair of black pants, a bright colored shirt and go out and have a great time.  Even though I learned to ballroom dance just so I had an excuse to wear a ballgown, I am lucky if I wear my ballgown twice a year.  But my black swing pants have taken me everywhere else I have wanted to go dancing in Asheville, NC and all over the country. </p>
<p>See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p><a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_self">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>The People You See on the Sideline &#8211; The Field Guide Continues&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/the-people-you-see-on-the-sideline-the-field-guide-continues/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/the-people-you-see-on-the-sideline-the-field-guide-continues/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Feb 2010 18:41:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dance Etiquette]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA["The Sideline - Where folks cluster to eat, drink and be merry"
"The sideline encompasses dance hall territory where folks congregate to eat, drink and visit.  Although this turf includes dancers sitting out between dances, it also has its own special array of wildlife.

Many of these sideliners are evolving through the pre-dance phase of their development.  They are watching the dancers, observing the dress, learning the protocol and acclimating to the environment.  After a few visits and a period of observation, sideliners usually join the dance lessons.

Species you might find lurking on the sideline include:

Cowboys - Choose to work on the look before moving to the dance, and got it right... have ready ripostes to avoid dancing should they actually get asked.
Furballs - Conceal bald spot under an expensive hat; favor beards; wear flimsy, unbuttoned shirts; prefer shirt ripped off so their hair shoulders can be admired; ladies say they feel like warm loofahs.
Groupies - Adore band members, or occasionally regular dancers, with obsessive intensity; rarely dance themselves; sit perfectly still staring at the band or dancers; nurse drinks.
Lounge Lizards - Sport white shoes, assisted hair, polyester shirts and enough neck chains to compose a Mr. "T" starter kit; close personal friends with bartenders; surrounded by an alcoholic haze and cigarette smoke.
Greenhorns- Read about dancing in the newspaper; sit alone looking dazed; suffering from a recent broken relationship... if you give them an advertising flyer about upcoming lessons, they will attend and never forget you.
Stool Hounds - Get carded (asked for ID to prove they are of drinking age) by doorman; drink beer; wear baseball caps, T-shirts and tennis shoes; sit in groups, but very little conversation; learning the ropes of sociability; served free coffee by the end of the evening.
Suits - In from out of town; on expense accounts; stay at airport hotels; arrive at the dance hall by taxi; remove coat and tie to look more country; may roll up shirtsleeves so French cuffs aren't so apparent; hoping to get lucky; won't."
Excerpt from "Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette" by Paul McClure

Why are the people on the sideline so important?
Because silly, we all used to be one. 

These are the people on the edge. 

They are the "dying to dance, but hoping nobody will ask me," people. 

Perhaps they want to dance, but they don't know how. 

Maybe they are beginner dancers that just need a little confidence boost.  Sometimes it takes all their courage to get in the door and there is little courage left for the dance floor.

We have all been there.  The difference between the Sideliners and Regular Dancers are the amount of miles collected in trips around the dance floor. 

We all have to get started dancing somewhere... why not here?
Though it is hard for some beginner dancers to believe, nobody has been dancing since birth.  Not a single dancer got their start in the womb.  I'll let you know if that happens, but for now... my baby has yet to "Boom A Boom" correctly in my belly. 

Many great social swing and ballroom dancers did not start dancing until they are adults.  Not long ago, they were Sideliners too.  But they found a way to learn how to dance, stuck with it and in time became the life of the party.

One way to help you get off the sideline and on to the dance floor is to learn at home with a "Learn how to dance" DVD.  With ZeDiamond Dance Method - Learn the East Coast Swing DVD's, you could be up and dancing in less than 90 minutes.  Once you master the basics of rhythm, connection and a few simple dance moves in East Coast Swing, you will be out on that dance floor enjoying yourself, the music and your partner.  After that, their is no turning back.  You will have transformed from a Sideliner to a Regular Dancer and soon will be the envy of other Sideliners. 

 See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes

ZeDiamond Dance Method
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>&#8220;The Sideline &#8211; Where folks cluster to eat, drink and be merry&#8221;</h1>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-32" title="Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Paul-McClures-CDE.jpg" alt="Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette" width="90" height="90" />&#8220;The sideline encompasses dance hall territory where folks congregate to eat, drink and visit.  Although this turf includes dancers sitting out between dances, it also has its own special array of wildlife.</p>
<p>Many of these sideliners are evolving through the pre-dance phase of their development.  They are watching the dancers, observing the dress, learning the protocol and acclimating to the environment.  After a few visits and a period of observation, sideliners usually join the dance lessons.</p>
<p>Species you might find lurking on the sideline include:</p>
<ul>
<li><em>Cowboys</em> &#8211; Choose to work on the look before moving to the dance, and got it right&#8230; have ready ripostes to avoid dancing should they actually get asked.</li>
<li><em>Furballs</em> &#8211; Conceal bald spot under an expensive hat; favor beards; wear flimsy, unbuttoned shirts; prefer shirt ripped off so their hair shoulders can be admired; ladies say they feel like warm loofahs.</li>
<li><em>Groupies</em> &#8211; Adore band members, or occasionally regular dancers, with obsessive intensity; rarely dance themselves; sit perfectly still staring at the band or dancers; nurse drinks.</li>
<li><em>Lounge Lizards</em> &#8211; Sport white shoes, assisted hair, polyester shirts and enough neck chains to compose a Mr. &#8220;T&#8221; starter kit; close personal friends with bartenders; surrounded by an alcoholic haze and cigarette smoke.</li>
<li><em>Greenhorns</em>- Read about dancing in the newspaper; sit alone looking dazed; suffering from a recent broken relationship&#8230; if you give them an advertising flyer about upcoming lessons, they will attend and never forget you.</li>
<li><em>Stool Hounds</em> &#8211; Get carded (asked for ID to prove they are of drinking age) by doorman; drink beer; wear baseball caps, T-shirts and tennis shoes; sit in groups, but very little conversation; learning the ropes of sociability; served free coffee by the end of the evening.</li>
<li><em>Suits</em> &#8211; In from out of town; on expense accounts; stay at airport hotels; arrive at the dance hall by taxi; remove coat and tie to look more country; may roll up shirtsleeves so French cuffs aren&#8217;t so apparent; hoping to get lucky; won&#8217;t.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt from &#8220;Paul McClure&#8217;s Country Dance Etiquette&#8221; by Paul McClure</p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-228" title="Amy at Worlds Crop" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amy-at-Worlds-Crop.JPG" alt="Amy at Worlds Crop" width="160" height="268" />Why are the people on the sideline so important?</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">Because silly, we all used to be one. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">These are the people on the edge. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">They are the &#8221;dying to dance, but hoping nobody will ask me,&#8221; people. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Perhaps they want to dance, but they don&#8217;t know how. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Maybe they are beginner dancers that just need a little confidence boost.  Sometimes it takes all their courage to get in the door and there is little courage left for the dance floor.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">We have all been there.  The difference between the Sideliners and Regular Dancers are the amount of miles collected in trips around the dance floor. </p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">We all have to get started dancing somewhere&#8230; why not here?</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">Though it is hard for some beginner dancers to believe, nobody has been dancing since birth.  Not a single dancer got their start in the womb.  I&#8217;ll let you know if that happens, but for now&#8230; my baby has yet to <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">&#8220;Boom A Boom&#8221;</a> correctly in my belly. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><strong>Many great social swing and ballroom dancers did not start dancing until they are adults</strong>.  Not long ago, they were Sideliners too.  But they found a way to learn how to dance, stuck with it and in time became the life of the party.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">One way to help you get off the sideline and on to the dance floor is to learn at home with a <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Learn how to dance&#8221; DVD</a>.  With <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method &#8211; Learn the East Coast Swing DVD&#8217;s</a>, you could be up and dancing in less than 90 minutes.  Once you master the basics of rhythm, connection and a few simple dance moves in <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">East Coast Swing</a>, you will be out on that dance floor enjoying yourself, the music and your partner.  After that, their is no turning back.  You will have transformed from a Sideliner to a Regular Dancer and soon will be the envy of other Sideliners. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;"> See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
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		<title>Ten Reasons to Love Ballroom and Swing Dancing</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/ten-reasons-to-love-ballroom-and-swing-dancing/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/ten-reasons-to-love-ballroom-and-swing-dancing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 2010 18:49:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[We all have different reasons to learn how to dance...
When I started dancing, I was a single college student.  I was stuck on campus taking summer school classes.   Unlike other students, I wanted to do something other than hang out in a smokey bar and drink away brain cells.  I wanted to make new friends.  I wanted to express myself.  I wanted to be a "regular" somewhere.  I wanted to know that I could just show up (without a date) and see people I knew, have a good time and still get up and go to class in the morning without a headache. 

What I never knew I always wanted, was to learn how to Swing Dance.  I have gotten everything I wanted and so much more from swing dancing.  It all started with a free East Coast Swing  Dance lesson and skyrocketted  from there. 

Some people need a little more reason to try East Coast Swing Dancing for the first time.  Before ordering your ZeDiamond Dance Method DVD, consider the following list of 10 reasons to love dancing. 

Ten Reasons to Love Ballroom Dance
"You've probably seen the very popular BBC television program Strictly Come Dancing, in the USA it was called Dancing with the Stars. If you're wondering what all the fuss is about look no further because here's a beginners guide to the top ten reasons to love ballroom dancing.

One - The Music

Ballroom and Latin dance music is quite simply fabulous and it makes you want to dance. I defy anyone to listen to 'Shout It Feel It' by the Count Basie Orchestra and not want to at least tap their feet! Dancing aside there has been a resurgence in interest in jazz and swing music, Michael Buble and Jamie Cullum being two modern exponents of the genre, and this has only helped dance to once again capture the public imagination.

Two - It's Up Close and Personal

Before the recent interest in ballroom dancing people used to laugh when I told them I danced. They saw it as a strange thing to do. I never quite understood this as in the words of George Bernard Shaw dancing is the "vertical expression of a horizontal desire legalized by music"? Surely a reason to love ballroom dancing.

Three - Health Benefits

According to researchers social dancing provides the body with many health benefits. It may help reduce stress, increase energy, and improve strength, muscle tone, and co-ordination. Dancing can also burn as many calories as walking or riding a bike. One of the best aspects of ballroom dancing is the fun you can have while you're doing something great for your body.

Four - The People You Meet

Like most walks of life dancing attracts all kinds of people but by far the majority of dancers are really nice people to know and great fun to be with.

Five - You Get to Dress Up

It's fair to say that ballroom dancing went through a phase where the ladies wore some quite strange outfits. But today layers of petticoats and lace have given way to flowing gowns and glamorous figure hugging designer chic. Of course the men still wear their tail suits but even here heavy fabric has given way to much lighter and cooler alternatives. Socially of course tail suits are not worn but everybody loves the chance to dress up and wear nice clothes and what better occasion than a ballroom dance!

Six - You Can be Competitive

We humans are a competitive lot and dancing is no different. There is a vibrant and active competitive circuit at all levels of ballroom dancing from professional through to beginner. Even if stepping out with a number pinned to your back isn't appealing you can still join in and shout your support from the wings. Contrary to popular belief competitive ballroom dancing isn't a genteel pastime, quite the opposite and anyone attending a competition for the first time might be surprised by the experience. Competitions are definitely a reason to love ballroom dancing!

Seven - You Can Do It All Over The World

Ballroom dancing is popular the world over and if you travel you will find kindred spirits in all four corners of the globe. Some countries are more actively involved in dancing than others but you will seldom be far from a dance hall or studio wherever you may roam.

Eight - You Can Make People Envious

Nobody likes a show off but there's a fine line between showing off and simply doing something you enjoy. There are many social situations where being able to dance is a positive boon and many people have taken up dancing after being at a wedding and watching people who can dance take to the floor wishing it was them. So another way of looking at this is if you dance at a social event you may well be encouraging others to take up dancing too!

Nine - It's Hard

I play golf. Golf's hard and week after week I go back to the course and week after week the course beats me. Dancing is hard too. Week after week I go to lessons and come away safe in the knowledge that there is still much to learn. But this isn't a bad thing. Learning and perhaps mastering things that are hard is part of the human condition and dancing will present you with a lifetime of learning opportunities and the associated feeling you get when you master just one small part of it. Like golf, dancing is rewarding and fun because it's hard.

Ten - It's just fun!

What ever the level of dancing you achieve you will have fun. From the beginners taking to the floor for the first time, often with a terrified look on their face, through to seasoned professionals strutting their stuff at a dance demonstration dancing makes you feel alive and it makes you smile."

Excerpt from Ten Reasons to Love Ballroom Dance by David A Robinson
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_A_Robinson  

It has been more than 10 years since I took that East Coast Swing Dance lesson and I am still benefiting from it.
Now, I have hundreds of friends across the country (including new ones in Asheville, NC) that I met on the dance floor.  I have the confidence to walk into a room of strangers and just start talking to people.  Twice, I have moved to areas where I knew few people and didn't have a job, but I found the dance community and started building a new life.  I have greatly improved my mental and physical health from all the smiles and miles of dancing I have put on my feet.  My brain enjoys the challenge of learning new dance steps and dance moves, styling and technique.  Dancing is a whole body, whole mind, whole soul activity... an activity best shared with others.

Okay, I'm convinced.  How do I get started dancing?
For many people, the first dance they learn is the East Coast Swing.  Click here to learn a little about the history of East Coast Swing Dancing.  The East Coast Swing is a fun and lively dance that can be danced to a variety of music. Click here to watch a performance of East Coast Swing Dancing.

You can start dancing, quickly and easily right in your own home.  Just move the coffee table, grab a partner and pop in this DVD.  Take your first dance lesson with ZeDiamond Dance Method - Learn the East Coast Swing.  You will learn right along with a class of beginner dancers.  They ask questions, they laugh, they learn more than dance steps, they learn to dance with each other... just like you will. 

You need more reasons before you give East Coast Swing Dancing a try?  Click here to see if ballroom and swing dancing are right for you.

Once you learn ZeDiamond Dance Method, you will be able to learn other dances and useother dance systems as well.  Build up you confidence by learning at home with the DVD dance lessons.  Then go out and dance in nightclubs, go to ballroom and swing dances and continue to take local dance lessons.  You can always comeback and review what you have learned with ZeDiamond Dance Methodby popping in the DVD and dancing along at home.

See you out on the dance floor,

Amy Barnes
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-48 alignleft" title="Amy and Jason" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason-150x150.jpg" alt="Amy and Jason Barnes cutting a rug" width="150" height="150" /></h1>
<h1>We all have different reasons to learn how to dance&#8230;</h1>
<p>When I started dancing, I was a single college student.  I was stuck on campus taking summer school classes.   Unlike other students, I wanted to do something other than hang out in a smokey bar and drink away brain cells.  I wanted to make new friends.  I wanted to express myself.  I wanted to be a &#8220;regular&#8221; somewhere.  I wanted to know that I could just show up (without a date) and see people I knew, have a good time and still get up and go to class in the morning without a headache. </p>
<p>What I never knew I always wanted, was to learn how to Swing Dance.  I have gotten everything I wanted and so much more from swing dancing.  It all started with a free <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">East Coast Swing </a> Dance lesson and skyrocketted  from there. </p>
<p>Some people need a little more reason to try East Coast Swing Dancing for the first time.  Before ordering your <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method DVD</a>, consider the following list of 10 reasons to love dancing. </p>
<h1>Ten Reasons to Love Ballroom Dance</h1>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve probably seen the very popular BBC television program Strictly Come Dancing, in the USA it was called Dancing with the Stars. If you&#8217;re wondering what all the fuss is about look no further because here&#8217;s a beginners guide to the top ten reasons to love ballroom dancing.</p>
<p><strong>One &#8211; The Music</strong></p>
<p>Ballroom and Latin dance music is quite simply fabulous and it makes you want to dance. I defy anyone to listen to &#8216;Shout It Feel It&#8217; by the Count Basie Orchestra and not want to at least tap their feet! Dancing aside there has been a resurgence in interest in jazz and swing music, Michael Buble and Jamie Cullum being two modern exponents of the genre, and this has only helped dance to once again capture the public imagination.</p>
<p><strong>Two &#8211; It&#8217;s Up Close and Personal</strong></p>
<p>Before the recent interest in ballroom dancing people used to laugh when I told them I danced. They saw it as a strange thing to do. I never quite understood this as in the words of George Bernard Shaw dancing is the &#8220;vertical expression of a horizontal desire legalized by music&#8221;? Surely a reason to love ballroom dancing.</p>
<p><strong>Three &#8211; Health Benefits</strong></p>
<p>According to researchers social dancing provides the body with many health benefits. It may help reduce stress, increase energy, and improve strength, muscle tone, and co-ordination. Dancing can also burn as many calories as walking or riding a bike. One of the best aspects of ballroom dancing is the fun you can have while you&#8217;re doing something great for your body.</p>
<p><strong>Four &#8211; The People You Meet</strong></p>
<p>Like most walks of life dancing attracts all kinds of people but by far the majority of dancers are really nice people to know and great fun to be with.</p>
<p><strong>Five &#8211; You Get to Dress Up</strong></p>
<p>It&#8217;s fair to say that ballroom dancing went through a phase where the ladies wore some quite strange outfits. But today layers of petticoats and lace have given way to flowing gowns and glamorous figure hugging designer chic. Of course the men still wear their tail suits but even here heavy fabric has given way to much lighter and cooler alternatives. Socially of course tail suits are not worn but everybody loves the chance to dress up and wear nice clothes and what better occasion than a ballroom dance!</p>
<p><strong>Six &#8211; You Can be Competitive</strong></p>
<p>We humans are a competitive lot and dancing is no different. There is a vibrant and active competitive circuit at all levels of ballroom dancing from professional through to beginner. Even if stepping out with a number pinned to your back isn&#8217;t appealing you can still join in and shout your support from the wings. Contrary to popular belief competitive ballroom dancing isn&#8217;t a genteel pastime, quite the opposite and anyone attending a competition for the first time might be surprised by the experience. Competitions are definitely a reason to love ballroom dancing!</p>
<p><strong>Seven &#8211; You Can Do It All Over The World</strong></p>
<p>Ballroom dancing is popular the world over and if you travel you will find kindred spirits in all four corners of the globe. Some countries are more actively involved in dancing than others but you will seldom be far from a dance hall or studio wherever you may roam.</p>
<p><strong>Eight &#8211; You Can Make People Envious</strong></p>
<p>Nobody likes a show off but there&#8217;s a fine line between showing off and simply doing something you enjoy. There are many social situations where being able to dance is a positive boon and many people have taken up dancing after being at a wedding and watching people who can dance take to the floor wishing it was them. So another way of looking at this is if you dance at a social event you may well be encouraging others to take up dancing too!</p>
<p><strong>Nine &#8211; It&#8217;s Hard</strong></p>
<p>I play golf. Golf&#8217;s hard and week after week I go back to the course and week after week the course beats me. Dancing is hard too. Week after week I go to lessons and come away safe in the knowledge that there is still much to learn. But this isn&#8217;t a bad thing. Learning and perhaps mastering things that are hard is part of the human condition and dancing will present you with a lifetime of learning opportunities and the associated feeling you get when you master just one small part of it. Like golf, dancing is rewarding and fun because it&#8217;s hard.</p>
<p><strong>Ten &#8211; It&#8217;s just fun!</strong></p>
<p>What ever the level of dancing you achieve you will have fun. From the beginners taking to the floor for the first time, often with a terrified look on their face, through to seasoned professionals strutting their stuff at a dance demonstration dancing makes you feel alive and it makes you smile.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt from <em>Ten Reasons to Love Ballroom Dance</em> by David A Robinson<br />
Article Source: <a href="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-admin/?expert=David_A_Robinson">http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_A_Robinson </a> </p>
<h1>It has been more than 10 years since I took that East Coast Swing Dance lesson and I am still benefiting from it.</h1>
<p>Now, I have hundreds of friends across the country (including new ones in Asheville, NC) that I met on the dance floor.  I have the confidence to walk into a room of strangers and just start talking to people.  Twice, I have moved to areas where I knew few people and didn&#8217;t have a job, but I found the dance community and started building a new life.  I have greatly improved my mental and physical health from all the smiles and miles of dancing I have put on my feet.  My brain enjoys the challenge of learning new dance steps and dance moves, styling and technique.  Dancing is a whole body, whole mind, whole soul activity&#8230; an activity best shared with others.</p>
<h1>Okay, I&#8217;m convinced.  How do I get started dancing?</h1>
<p>For many people, the first dance they learn is the East Coast Swing.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">Click here </a>to learn a little about the <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">history of East Coast Swing Dancing</a>.  The East Coast Swing is a fun and lively dance that can be danced to a variety of music. <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmeeastcoastswing.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> to watch a <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmeeastcoastswing.html" target="_blank">performance of East Coast Swing Dancing</a>.</p>
<p>You can start dancing, quickly and easily right in your own home.  Just move the coffee table, grab a partner and pop in <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">this DVD</a>.  Take your first dance lesson with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method &#8211; Learn the East Coast Swing</a>.  You will learn right along with a class of beginner dancers.  They ask questions, they laugh, they learn more than dance steps, they learn to dance with each other&#8230; just like you will. </p>
<p>You need more reasons before you give East Coast Swing Dancing a try?  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> to see if ballroom and swing dancing are <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">right for you</a>.</p>
<p>Once you learn <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/index.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>, you will be able to learn other dances and useother dance systems as well.  Build up you confidence by learning at home with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">the DVD dance lessons</a>.  Then go out and dance in nightclubs, go to ballroom and swing dances and continue to take local dance lessons.  You can always comeback and review what you have learned with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/index.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>by popping in <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">the DVD</a> and dancing along at home.</p>
<p>See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/index.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
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		<title>Declining a Dance</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/declining-a-dance/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/declining-a-dance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Jan 2010 16:59:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dance Etiquette]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[When you just can't dance one more...
I've been there.  I've been the person hiding in the back, strangely hoping and not hoping someone asks me to dance.  I've been too out of breath to speak, let alone dance another one.  I've been stepped on, had my arm wrenched, been hit by random free arms and I am now limping my way off the dance floor... just to meet the hopeful expression of a gentleman asking me, "Want-to?"

Declining a dance request is far more than, "just say no."  You might be tired, hurt, thirsty or just not have another East Coast Swing left in you... But if all you say to the polite request to dance is, "No," then you suddenly have a bigger problem on your hands than just sore toes.  Proper dance etiquette can help you politely decline a dance, while helping you keep or improve your chances for future dances.

Here is Paul McClure to help guide us through what could be a sticky situation at ballroom, swing or nightclub dance.

Declining A Dance
"When asked to dance, good manners dictate you say, "Yes," at least once, unless the requesting party has overwhelming social disabilities.  Nothing shows class like a gracious acceptance of a dance from someone who may not appear to be exactly God's gift.  Others notice.

However, if someone asks you to dance and you choose to decline, then do so without actually saying the word, "No," and explain why you passed up the offer.  Suggestions include:

"Let me sit this one out to catch my breath."
"Give me a few more dances to get up my courage."
"I haven't learned that dance yet; how about a Rain Check till next time?"
"I want to stay on the sidelines in hopes that Billy Bob will ask me to dance."
"I just told Billy Bob,'No,' so I need to sit out a couple dances in order not to hurt his feelings."
Also, when you decline a dance offer, introduce yourself and engage the petitioner in conversation for a short while so it won't be evident to everybody in the room that you refused to dance."

Excerpt from "Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette"

Now that I have said, "No," now what?
This is a rule of etiquette that I feel very strongly about. 

Once you have turned down a dance request, you may not accept another until the current song has ended and a new song has started! 

I know what you are thinking... "But I want to dance to this song, just not with this person.  I would rather take the chance that someone better comes along and asks me."  Well, you can do that, if you want to be known as a "dance snob."  Though it may be fun to toy with the idea of, "I only dance with the best," it will quickly leave you few and far between in the partner department. 

Typically, the most popular dancers at the party are the ones who dance with the widest variety of partners.  People notice who you dance with and who you turn down.  If there is an honest desire to dance a particular dance or song with a certain someone, ask them for that dance early, before the song is even played.  That way, when Bubba asks you to dance to your favorite swing song, you can politely say, "I'm sorry Bubba, Billy Ray already promised me this dance.  But please ask me again later.  I do want to dance with you tonight." Then you can run to Billy Ray guilt free (provided Billy Ray remembered that this is your song) and Bubba is not crushed.  In fact, Bubba is hunting for a new partner, and still looking forward to dancing with you down the road. 

This rule is so universal, I have been made aware of it in my travels, not just in Asheville, NC.  I have walked over to a person in the middle of a song and started chatting with them.  Then they tell me, "I would really love to dance with you, but I have already turned someone down for this song.  Can I have the next swing song with you?"  I just think to myself, "Score! One point to the polite dancer at my side."  But I always answer, "Yes!"
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-79" title="Amy and Jason in Indy" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason-in-Indy-150x150.jpg" alt="Amy and Jason in Indy" width="150" height="150" />When you just can&#8217;t dance one more&#8230;</h1>
<p>I&#8217;ve been there.  I&#8217;ve been the person hiding in the back, strangely hoping and not hoping someone asks me to dance.  I&#8217;ve been too out of breath to speak, let alone dance another one.  I&#8217;ve been stepped on, had my arm wrenched, been hit by random free arms and I am now limping my way off the dance floor&#8230; just to meet the hopeful expression of a gentleman asking me, &#8220;Want-to?&#8221;</p>
<p>Declining a dance request is far more than, &#8220;just say no.&#8221;  You might be tired, hurt, thirsty or just not have another <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">East Coast Swing</a> left in you&#8230; But if all you say to the polite request to dance is, &#8220;No,&#8221; then you suddenly have a bigger problem than just sore toes.  Proper dance etiquette can help you politely decline a dance, while helping you keep or improve your chances for future dances.</p>
<p>Here is Paul McClure to help guide us through what could be a sticky situation at ballroom, swing or nightclub dance.</p>
<h1><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-32" title="Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Paul-McClures-CDE.jpg" alt="Paul McClure's Country Dance Etiquette" width="90" height="90" />Declining A Dance</h1>
<p>&#8220;When asked to dance, good manners dictate you say, &#8220;Yes,&#8221; at least once, unless the requesting party has overwhelming social disabilities.  Nothing shows class like a gracious acceptance of a dance from someone who may not appear to be exactly God&#8217;s gift.  Others notice.</p>
<p>However, if someone asks you to dance and you choose to decline, then do so without actually saying the word, &#8220;No,&#8221; and explain why you passed up the offer.  Suggestions include:</p>
<ul>
<li>&#8220;Let me sit this one out to catch my breath.&#8221;</li>
<li>&#8220;Give me a few more dances to get up my courage.&#8221;</li>
<li>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t learned that dance yet; how about a Rain Check till next time?&#8221;</li>
<li>&#8220;I want to stay on the sidelines in hopes that Billy Bob will ask me to dance.&#8221;</li>
<li>&#8220;I just told Billy Bob,&#8217;No,&#8217; so I need to sit out a couple dances in order not to hurt his feelings.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>Also, when you decline a dance offer, introduce yourself and engage the petitioner in conversation for a short while so it won&#8217;t be evident to everybody in the room that you refused to dance.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">Excerpt from &#8220;Paul McClure&#8217;s Country Dance Etiquette&#8221;</p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">Now that I have said, &#8220;No,&#8221; now what?</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">This is a rule of etiquette that I feel very strongly about<strong>. </strong></p>
<h2 style="text-align: left;">Once you have turned down a dance request, you may not accept another until the current song has ended and a new song has started! </h2>
<p style="text-align: left;">I know what you are thinking&#8230; &#8220;But I want to dance to this song, just not with this person.  I would rather take the chance that someone better comes along and asks me.&#8221;  Well, you can do that, if you want to be known as a &#8220;dance snob.&#8221;  Though it may be fun to toy with the idea of, &#8220;I <em>only</em> dance with <em>certain people</em>,&#8221; it will quickly leave you few and far between in the partner department. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Typically, the most popular dancers at the party are the ones who dance with the widest variety of partners.  People notice who you dance with and who you turn down. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">If there is an honest desire to dance a particular dance or song with a certain someone, ask them for that dance early, before the song is even played.  Later, when Bubba asks you to dance to your favorite swing song, you can politely say, &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry Bubba, Billy Bob already promised me this dance.  But please ask me again later.  I do want to dance with you tonight.&#8221;  Then you can run to Billy Bob guilt free (provided Billy Bob remembered that this is your song) and Bubba is not crushed.  In fact, Bubba is hunting for a new partner, and still looking forward to dancing with you down the road. </p>
<p style="text-align: left;">This rule is so universal, I have been made aware of it in my travels, not just in Asheville, NC.  I have walked over to a person in the middle of a song and started chatting with them.  Then they tell me, &#8220;I would really love to dance with you, but I have already turned someone down for this song.  Can I have the next Swing with you?&#8221;  I just think to myself, &#8220;Score! One point to the polite dancer at my side.&#8221;  But I always answer, &#8220;Yes!&#8221;</p>
<h1 style="text-align: left;">But I don&#8217;t feel comfortable dancing yet&#8230;</h1>
<p style="text-align: left;">Never fear, in time you will become more at ease on the dance floor.  Practicing at home with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method DVD&#8217;s</a> will help you on your way to becoming a more confident and accomplished dancer.  It&#8217;s simple. Start with <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method &#8211; Learn the East Coast Swing </a>and soon you will be ready to learn how to dance other dances.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> was designed not only to help you learn how to East Coast Swing, but to help you feel the rhythm of the music and connect with your dance partners.  With a little practice, you will be enjoying the music and your partner and not worrying about your feet.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> to watch a short video about <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">See you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method </a></p>
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		<title>Just a Reminder&#8230; important gift giving holiday is a month away!</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/just-a-reminder-important-gift-giving-holiday-is-a-month-away/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/just-a-reminder-important-gift-giving-holiday-is-a-month-away/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Jan 2010 16:04:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[ballroom]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[swing dancing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Valentine's Day]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The countdown to Valentine's Day has started!
That's right boys and girls.  We have less than 30 days to figure out what we are going to do for this Valentine's Day holiday.  Some of us will go out... Some of us will stay in... Some of us will be stuck working (just one of the perks of the service industry)... But all of us will be doing something to honor (or dishonor) this upcoming holiday.

My favorite way to celebrate any holiday is to go out and go dancing.  No big surprise there.  But what is surprising is the number of other people who celebrate through dance.  We dance at weddings.  We dance family reunions.  We dance at tailgate parties (don't think for a second I didn't see you be-bopping around to the radio with a chicken wing in one hand and a frosty beverage in the other).  We dance in our kitchens when no one is watching.  So why should Valentine's Day be any different?  We are celebrating love... the hunt for love... the hope for love... and our desire to be loved.  We should be dancing with all the love and joy in our hearts.

Wait a second - Don't tell me you don't dance!
As children, we all dance.  I've got two nephews that can prove it.  At any given time, be it car, canoe or K-Mart, if they hear even the faintest music, they are dancing to it.  Mind you, they aren't going to win "So You Think You Can Dance" anytime soon.  But they are having a great time and they don't care who is watching them.

Something happens as we get older.  We get insecure and lose our confidence.  Rather than having fun and enjoying ourselves like children, we worry about looking silly and unattractive to others.  But some of us overcome this and still enjoy to dance.  Those who do not overcome these self-imposed setbacks, long to dance.

The perfect gift - A lifetime of dancing together.
Guys, just a suggestion... Dance lessons make a great gift for ladies that have always wanted to learn how to dance. Trust me, they all want to learn how to dance. Even your lady. They like it even more when you learn to dance with them! Now is your chance to make her dancing dream come true.  You can learn how to swing dance in the comfort of your own home.  ZeDiamond Dance Method makes it quick and easy to learn the east coast swing.  After finishing the "Learn the East Coast Swing" 90 minute 2 DVD set, you will have enough confidence and dance moves to spend the entire Valentine's Day Night out dancing the night away.  Click here to watch a short video that demonstrates ZeDiamond Dance Method.  Not familiar with swing dancing?  Watch a video of East Coast Swing dancing or read about the history of East Coast Swing dancing on the ZeDiamond Dance Method website.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-79" title="Amy and Jason in Indy" src="http://eastcoastswingdance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Amy-and-Jason-in-Indy-252x300.jpg" alt="Amy and Jason in Indy" width="252" height="300" />The countdown to Valentine&#8217;s Day has started!</h1>
<p>That&#8217;s right boys and girls.  We have less than 30 days to figure out what we are going to do for this Valentine&#8217;s Day holiday.  Some of us will go out&#8230; Some of us will stay in&#8230; Some of us will be stuck working (just one of the perks of the service industry)&#8230; But all of us will be doing something to honor (or dishonor) this upcoming holiday.</p>
<p>My favorite way to celebrate any holiday is to go out and go dancing.  No big surprise there.  But what is surprising is the number of other people who celebrate through dance.  We dance at weddings.  We dance family reunions.  We dance at tailgate parties (don&#8217;t think for a second I didn&#8217;t see you be-bopping around to the radio with a chicken wing in one hand and a frosty beverage in the other).  We dance in our kitchens when no one is watching.  So why should Valentine&#8217;s Day be any different?  We are celebrating love&#8230; the hunt for love&#8230; the hope for love&#8230; and our desire to be loved.  We should be dancing with all the love and joy in our hearts.</p>
<h1>Wait a second &#8211; Don&#8217;t tell me you don&#8217;t dance!</h1>
<p>As children, we all dance.  I&#8217;ve got two nephews that can prove it.  At any given time, be it car, canoe or K-Mart, if they hear even the faintest music, they are dancing to it.  Mind you, they aren&#8217;t going to win &#8220;So You Think You Can Dance&#8221; anytime soon.  But they are having a great time and they don&#8217;t care who is watching them.</p>
<p>Something happens as we get older.  We get insecure and lose our confidence.  Rather than having fun and enjoying ourselves like children, we worry about looking silly and unattractive to others.  But some of us overcome this and still enjoy to dance.  Those who do not overcome these self-imposed setbacks, long to dance.</p>
<h1>The perfect gift - A lifetime of dancing together.</h1>
<div><span id="profile_status"><span id="status_text">Guys, just a suggestion&#8230; Dance lessons make a great gift for ladies that have always wanted to learn how to dance. Trust me, they all want to learn how to dance. Even your lady. They like it even more when you learn to dance with them! Now is your chance to make her dancing dream come true.  You can learn how to swing dance in the comfort of your own home.  <a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> makes it quick and easy to learn the <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">east coast swing</a>.  After finishing the &#8220;<a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">Learn the East Coast Swing</a>&#8221; 90 minute 2 DVD set, you will have enough confidence and dance moves to spend the entire Valentine&#8217;s Day Night out dancing the night away.  <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> to watch a short video that demonstrates <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/showmezediamonddancemethod.html" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a>.  Not familiar with swing dancing?  <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/showmeeastcoastswing.html" target="_blank">Watch a video of East Coast Swing dancing</a> or read about the <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">history of East Coast Swing dancing</a> on the <a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a> website.</span></span></div>
<div><span><span> </span></span></div>
<div><span><span>Think of how romantic it would be to go out on a real &#8220;Dinner and Dancing Date&#8221; with your special someone.  You would get all dressed up. Go somewhere nice for dinner. And then sweep her off her feet as the two of you float and glide around the dance floor.</span></span></div>
<p>Unlike a membership to the jelly of the month club, the gift of dance keeps on giving.  You get to spend the rest of your life enjoying the <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">benefits of learning to dance</a>&#8230;  Improved confidence, better connection with your partner, and the ability to make any night out, a romantic night out.  Plus, you get to really wow them at the next wedding or family reunion.  <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> to see if <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">learning to ballroom or swing dance is right for you</a>.</p>
<p>As always, I look forward to seeing you out on the dance floor,</p>
<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/danceinstructors.html" target="_blank">Amy Barnes</a></p>
<p><a href="www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method</a></p>
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		<title>Learn the East Coast Swing</title>
		<link>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/learn-the-east-coast-swing/</link>
		<comments>http://eastcoastswingdance.com/east-coast-swing/learn-the-east-coast-swing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Dec 2009 17:56:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[East Coast Swing]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Learn the East Coast Swing in a whole new way!  Now learning the East Coast Swing  has been perfected by two dancers with drumming and rhythm background.  This new approach is better...  ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/purchase.html" target="_blank">Learn the East Coast Swing</a> in a whole new way!   <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecshistory.html" target="_blank">Swing dancing</a> has been around since the late 1920&#8217;s and has evolved with many different swing versions.  And now learning the East Coast Swing  has been perfected by two dancers with drumming and rhythm background.  <a href="http://zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">ZeDiamond Dance Method&#8217;s </a>approach to dance is better suited for the  modern swing dancer.   <a href="http://www.ZeDiamondDanceMethod.com">www.ZeDiamondDanceMethod.com</a></p>
<p>With the times so hectic, everyone is saying there just isn&#8217;t enough time.  Well, ZeDiamond Dance Method, is all about time and timing.  It&#8217;s about reconnecting to your self and your partner in a whole new way.  It&#8217;s the zen of swing dancing!  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com/ecsrightforyou.html" target="_blank">Can you imagine?</a>  Dance the swing and feel more grounded and centered?  You can with ZeDiamond Dance Method.  <a href="http://www.zediamonddancemethod.com" target="_blank">www.ZeDiamondDanceMethod.com</a>.</p>
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