Tag: Lessons
Salsa Lessons New York Bootcamp NY 8 Weeks
by admin on Mar.07, 2012, under Dance Training
JoelSalsa.com http Joel Salsa is New York City’s premier salsa dance training, offering private and group lessons for all ages and experience levels. Joel Dominguez & Maria Palmieri
Ballet Lessons : How to Become a Ballet Teacher
by admin on Nov.28, 2011, under Dance Training
Becoming a ballet teacher requires years of dance classes and dance training, knowledge of anatomy, understanding of age-appropriate ballet lessons and a love of children and the art of ballet. Continue taking ballet lessons to become a better dance teacher with tips from an experienced dance instructor in this free video ballet lesson. Expert: Lauri Gregoire Contact: www.bellevuedancecenter.com Bio: Lauri Gregoire is the owner and director of the Bellevue Dance Center. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge
Beginner Belly Dancing Lessons : Hip Snap Move in Belly Dancing
by admin on Dec.21, 2010, under Dance
Learn the hip snap belly dancing technique in this free video dance lesson. Expert: Portia Contact: www.bellymotions.com Bio: Portia is the founder, director, and chief instructor of Belly Motions, a premiere belly dance academy in Miami/Coral Gables, Florida. Filmmaker: Paul Muller
Flight lessons: as aerial dance soars in popularity, practitioners begin laying down a curriculum for training in the form.: An article from: Dance Magazine
by admin on Jan.24, 2010, under Dance Training
Product Description
This digital document is an article from Dance Magazine, published by Thomson Gale on February 1, 2006. The length of the article is 1064 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
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Title: Flight lessons: as aerial dance soa… More >>
Lessons From Las Vegas: Shattering Limitations
by admin on Jan.19, 2010, under Jazz
In July, 2006 I attended the International Dance and Exercise Association (IDEA) conference in Las Vegas. As someone who started my coaching career by helping people create and achieve their fitness goals, I have attended this 4-day event for nearly a decade.
Over time, I worked out a preference for my favorite presenters and topics and generally stayed with the tried and true.
This year, maybe because it was in Vegas, I decided to gamble and take some risks. By this I mean, I signed up for classes that put me far outside my comfort zone. What would normally cause me to run screaming from the room in a cold sweat? I can sum it up in one word…
Dance.
Despite working in group exercise, I never had any dance training, and actually have a lousy sense of rhythm. Whenever I went “dancing”, I sat on the sidelines and watched my friends spin around the floor. If a guy asked me to dance, I’d give a strained smile, shake my head, and utter the words, “I don’t dance.”
For years I avoided diving into dance classes at IDEA because, c’mon there’s no way I’m going to put myself next to classically trained instructors who started taking tap at the age of 2. And I knew my incredibly talented dancer friends would have no problem pointing fingers at me and laughing outright at my attempts to look hip or graceful. (Yes, you know who you are.)
But this year I survived classes rooted in jazz, hip-hop, and afro-Cuban styles.
Did I look graceful? Not always. Did I look ridiculous? You have no idea.
Why am I telling you this?
Stay with me. I do have a point.
On the first morning of the conference at 6am, while I stood in line in for coffee near the hotel lobby, I stared as a trio of partiers strolled past with their Heinekens still in hand. I had probably gone to bed the night before around 11pm and these people were just calling it a night well after dawn. This blew me away.
That night I stayed up until midnight. The next until 2am. And the final night I pulled the covers over myself at 5:30 in the morning.
What did I do to occupy myself all night long? Play roulette? A late night with Celine Dion?
My friends and I went dancing.
And I had a fantastic time on the dance floor.
Amazing.
In the past, dancing until dawn was not even a remote possibility.
I hid behind those words, “I don’t dance.”
But by smashing that notion and taking some risks, by being willing to look ridiculous, I experienced some amazing things that I wouldn’t have seen had I stuck to my usual regimen of early to bed, early to rise.
What limitations do you put on yourself either in your business or in your life?
What notions are you hiding behind?
How does an unwillingness to look ridiculous hold you back?
Food for thought.