I believe that a well informed student can face a bad experience and avoid being negatively influenced by it and even turn such an episode into a positive growing experience.
I believe we think the same way. The part that is debatable is what constitutes being "well-informed?"
In Salsa dancing, I think it's a combination of teacher advice plus one's own personality make-up. Ideally it would be 50/50. However, I'm thinking it's more like 20/80. Yes, I put a large emphasis on a person's individual make-up and current range of experience that determines success.
Some people are extremely sensitive to adversity in dancing, so any small negative experience or feedback can set them on a downward spiral. It happened to my friend, however, was very unfortunate as the negative feedback he received occurred in-class (not from the teacher, but from a teacher's assistant). The seed was planted that he would always be a bad dancer who wouldn't be able to provide someone a good dance experience. From that point on, there was absolutely nothing the teacher could do as the damage had been done.
My friend is a successful man, extremely well educated (Harvard grad) and very sociable too. He even had the critical self-awareness of himself - to a fault - and knew that he wasn't a very good dancer. All it took was one negative comment to destroy his self-confidence.
It's totally possible that he could have persevered longer had he been given more support from his teacher, though sooner or later, I'm pretty sure the outcome would have been the same.
On the flipside, I know many others who persevered through hell and continued dancing. They were the ones who beat the odds. Through facing adversity and hardship, they found a way to turn negative experiences into a positive, but that's more due to their personality make-up and not the knowledge their teachers imparted onto them.
As for myself, I have lived a fairly charmed salsa life. So even though I advocate hardship as being necessary, I haven't experienced all that much myself.
However, with the hardship I did experience, my Salsa teachers could not help me with...
.....unless they were so versatile as to become my relationship therapist, career guidance counselor and medical doctor.
All I know is that the longer I dance, the easier it gets.
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