Looks and Managing Low Confidence

A couple of things come to mind.

1) Know what you can do well. Try to structure your dance around those things.

2) Mistakes happen. Don’t frown or make it appear like you are placing blame. Either ignore them or laugh it off.

3) Give breathing room to your partner. If you dance with someone who is more advanced than you, the more likely they will appreciate not being completely handcuffed. Trying to throw everything you know at them puts unnecessary pressure that you do not need.

4) Take time at the beginning of the song to get to know your partner. Don’t start the dance by throwing them around (or ever). Try to match the song’s energy. Is there a lull during the song? Can you slow it down when needed?

5) Groove in place. If you haven’t learned how to do this, learn it asap. This is basically you saying “I don’t need fancy patterns. I can enjoy the dance following only the rhythms.” The beauty of grooving is that you can do it at any point during a song and it’s also a great way to give yourself breathing room and reset.

Always super-helpful feedback, thank you!
 
I, sometimes, don't understand some older women. Last wednesday, I was at a local dance event. I saw some older women just waited to be asked to the floor the whole night. If you want to dance, it wouldn't hurt to ask any guys that you think they are friendly. You paid your fee just like everybody else. Don't pay a fee to let others decide when you will dance, you do it yourself.

It's not just older women. At kizomba parties, for example, I would estimate 2/3 of the women spend their night waiting/ sitting down rather than asking. Given that there are usually twice the number of follows as leads at these parties, waiting to be asked (as a follow) is a losing strategy, unless you are a super popular follow. A lot of these women only end up with only a few dances in a 3-hour party. So I don't know why they do that. (But I'm not complaining, more leads for me to choose from :D )

Even more confusing is that you will see various guys at kiz parties also waiting or standing around most of the night. Meanwhile there are tons of eager available follows for them to invite and yet they apparently prefer to spend most of their night standing around / not dancing. The only thing I can think of is that they get dumped after one dance a lot because of poor dancing skills, so they prefer to just hang around watching -- in that case their time would be better spent in classes or at home getting their skills up.
 
It's not just older women. At kizomba parties, for example, I would estimate 2/3 of the women spend their night waiting/ sitting down rather than asking. Given that there are usually twice the number of follows as leads at these parties, waiting to be asked (as a follow) is a losing strategy, unless you are a super popular follow. A lot of these women only end up with only a few dances in a 3-hour party. So I don't know why they do that.

I observe this in salsa, too, and I don't understand this either. We're in 21st century and my whole life I hear about equal rights and probably all of these women would insist they are emancipated - but ask a guy for a dance: no, no, no. "The man has to ask!" is probably most women's sophisticated answer to that. Most women are lost in their passiveness and never learned to take the active role. It is more comfortable as they avoid rejections, but as you said they can't really choose themselves.

Sometimes I really get tired of having constantly to ask and just sit down exhausted from this fighting over the girls. As most salsa songs are about 4 minutes there are 15 songs played during an hour, that makes about 40 times asking in a (short) night, and add some rejections so even more. Even many women I know very well never ever come asking, but I have to go to them. I find this ridiculous.

Question is if the majority of women really would prefer to change that. I suppose we are stuck in the evolutionary game that the man has to prove his boldness, and most women want it this way, even if they suffer some disadvantages from that. Anyway, the few followers I know that do come for asking me, I really appreciate them, as I appreciate bold women, too.
 
I observe this in salsa, too, and I don't understand this either. We're in 21st century and my whole life I hear about equal rights and probably all of these women would insist they are emancipated - but ask a guy for a dance: no, no, no. "The man has to ask!" is probably most women's sophisticated answer to that. Most women are lost in their passiveness and never learned to take the active role. It is more comfortable as they avoid rejections, but as you said they can't really choose themselves.

Sometimes I really get tired of having constantly to ask and just sit down exhausted from this fighting over the girls. As most salsa songs are about 4 minutes there are 15 songs played during an hour, that makes about 40 times asking in a (short) night, and add some rejections so even more. Even many women I know very well never ever come asking, but I have to go to them. I find this ridiculous.

Question is if the majority of women really would prefer to change that. I suppose we are stuck in the evolutionary game that the man has to prove his boldness, and most women want it this way, even if they suffer some disadvantages from that. Anyway, the few followers I know that do come for asking me, I really appreciate them, as I appreciate bold women, too.
based on my experience, if a women really wants to dance with you she'll let you know. You may know them well but who knows if they enjoy dancing with you or just do it out of politeness. The social quagmires of social dancing are quite complex and dependent on culture. In Israel, in a lead-heavy scene, there are actually many dominant follows who invite or clearly let leads know they want to dance.
 
It's not just older women. At kizomba parties, for example, I would estimate 2/3 of the women spend their night waiting/ sitting down rather than asking. Given that there are usually twice the number of follows as leads at these parties, waiting to be asked (as a follow) is a losing strategy, unless you are a super popular follow. A lot of these women only end up with only a few dances in a 3-hour party. So I don't know why they do that. (But I'm not complaining, more leads for me to choose from :D )

Even more confusing is that you will see various guys at kiz parties also waiting or standing around most of the night. Meanwhile there are tons of eager available follows for them to invite and yet they apparently prefer to spend most of their night standing around / not dancing. The only thing I can think of is that they get dumped after one dance a lot because of poor dancing skills, so they prefer to just hang around watching -- in that case their time would be better spent in classes or at home getting their skills up.

But then if these guys dance once with all the women, it is still a winning strategy with so many women as you say.:D Or do they get rejected?
 
You may know them well but who knows if they enjoy dancing with you or just do it out of politeness.

This argument is unavoidable, I would argue the same about somebody I don't know.
But I can tell you, when I cross the border it is different in the other country. Culture it is.
 
I get asked a LOT. sometimes when I am already on route to asking someone else.
Maybe I just attract the predators.
Thank god, too. That is how I gained the experience and then the confidence to ask for dances myself. I still get maybe 1 rejection (in Toronto). But I'm not going to lose sleep over it.
 
The only thing I can think of is that they get dumped after one dance a lot because of poor dancing skills, so they prefer to just hang around watching -- in that case their time would be better spent in classes or at home getting their skills up.


Not everyone take dancing seriously like you do. Some guys might just want to chill, and get to know women. They like to chat with women more than getting the dance. I know a few guys like that. one of them told me, "I enjoy the dance, you enjoy to learn."
 
Not everyone take dancing seriously like you do. Some guys might just want to chill, and get to know women. They like to chat with women more than getting the dance. I know a few guys like that. one of them told me, "I enjoy the dance, you enjoy to learn."

Oh I'm aware of that aspect, but the guys I was referring to aren't socializing/chatting to anyone, they're literally just standing/sitting down and on their phone for long periods of time.

PS The guys you're talking about would do well to get their dance skills up if they want to get to know women :D Good leads have a huge advantage there.

PPS I disagree with the guy you quoted. I don't think those of us who take dance seriously do it because we enjoy to learn, but rather, we really love to dance and we realize that the better you get at dancing, the more you can enjoy it. (More skill equals more fun!)
 
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I've forgotten how much I look because I enjoy dancing so much. I think my decent or average dancing helps my looks but you're right, you can't just go out without thinking about how sweaty you might be. It's good to go take a break and even wear a new shirt. That's what I do.
 
I saw a vid of my doing a spin from there other night. It's in a mambo shine. How can one put as much work as I do into practicing fundamentals at home and still look so sub par?
 
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