Well lately quite a few girs have mentioned how they're avoiding some creepy guys. Didn't hear as much about this in the previous scenes I went to.Is it a big problem where you are? I honestly don’t see it nor hear about it here.
Well lately quite a few girs have mentioned how they're avoiding some creepy guys. Didn't hear as much about this in the previous scenes I went to.Is it a big problem where you are? I honestly don’t see it nor hear about it here.
Well lately quite a few girs have mentioned how they're avoiding some creepy guys. Didn't hear as much about this in the previous scenes I went to.
Brasilians guys usually look at you and tell things most western girls would be very uncomfortable but we just laugh and move on cause we are used to it.
Thats why I told here before that I never found any creepy guy during all the years I am dancing kkk my 'creepiness sense' is broken perhaps
Here I think it is not the brazilian type that is considered creepy, but rather the socially awkward types that say weird things and exhibit stalker behavior
One out of the many reasons I prefer Salsa over Bachata (Sensual) / Kizomba is that in Salsa you hardly can come to close during the dance. In those other dances it happens quite often in social that you ask an unknown girl for a dance and she turns out to be a beginner: not knowing those "sensual" figures she may easily feel you come too close. I noticed those faces sometimes and got an uncomfortable feeling myself: I don't like to be seen as creepy. But try to dance Kizomba without coming too close: not possible. I stopped Kizomba anyway.
Upper echelon... hard to describeUpper echelon = good dancers?
I remember a couple of clubs in TO that gave off sleazy vibes and would attract younger as well as older people. These mixed club crowds along with the power posse (well-connected patrons) were breeding grounds for unseemly behavior.
And what is creepy? Is it someone who goes around sleeping with everyone? Because those I know who are successful getting girls into bed aren't seen as creeps but desirable, which is why it keeps happening.
Those who are unsuccessful at it are seen as the creeps, but they don't last in the scene.
When Salsa was the only game in town, there was enough reported creepy behavior, but as soon as the sensual dances became more popular, there was an exodus of creeps in the Salsa scene.
In the sensual dances, you start off the dance very close. It can of course go terribly wrong but not as often as in Salsa since it is expected.
When Salsa was the only game in town, there was enough reported creepy behavior, but as soon as the sensual dances became more popular, there was an exodus of creeps in the Salsa scene.
One out of the many reasons I prefer Salsa over Bachata (Sensual) / Kizomba is that in Salsa you hardly can come to close during the dance. In those other dances it happens quite often in social that you ask an unknown girl for a dance and she turns out to be a beginner: not knowing those "sensual" figures she may easily feel you come too close. I noticed those faces sometimes and got an uncomfortable feeling myself: I don't like to be seen as creepy. But try to dance Kizomba without coming too close: not possible. I stopped Kizomba anyway.
Fun fact: once a year it happens to me that a girl behaves creepy in Bachata - completely unknown, never danced with, never spoken a word with, but from the first second she presses herself so close to my body that I can hardly breathe. In younger years I would have thought "Oh she is hot for me!". Nowadays I prefer thinking she wants to make jealous somebody in the room watching. Anyway, even if I would like her, this is bad behaviour. It may develop during a dance, but not in the first second.
I read the thread and also liked what kbitten had written and was cited above. Creepiness in northern europe is definitely different as in Spain or Brazil (have been there). Just remember Borat making fun of US citizens feeling harassed when hugged as a greeting.
I remember a Forro class here, where all german girls really kept distance. Then after a switch a brasilian girl came and pressed herself very close to my body, smiling. I think she either had arrived just the day before in europe and just not knowing the cultural difference, or she had fun doing it intentionally and "shocking" those shy german guys here.She just danced Forro as it was normal to her at home.
But fun apart, as a guy I don't feel threatened or really harassed. It is different for women, because it happens to them not once a year but maybe everyday. Sometimes I ask them what happened and they hardly want to speak about it: apparently some guys do things I would never dare to do.
Somewhere on the forum a number of years back I narrated what a few German girls had to say. Their complaint was German guys don't dance close and are awkward if they have to.
This is most probably true, because it is the same vice versa![]()