TurqoiseHexagon
Changui
This happens more than people would like to admitWhat about 'pity' yesses to dances you know won't be good?
This happens more than people would like to admitWhat about 'pity' yesses to dances you know won't be good?
Rejections aren’t to be encouraged, I agree. I usually find girls who don’t show interest at the start (even when they say yes) don’t show interest in the dance.I never get this part - because someone said no, you didn’t waste 4 minutes.
1. You could also find you wasted four minutes with someone that willingly said yes. They could be drunk, a wild dancer, an over enthusiastic anticipatory, a wayward dancer, zero chemistry, etc.
2. It is rare that someone unwillingly says yes.
3. I don’t think you have been at socials where one rejection can mean there is no one else available to dance. Now you have to sit out 5-6 minutes.
What about 'pity' yesses to dances you know won't be good?
Perhaps our filters of asking are different. If I sense 50:50 chance of getting a no, I will not ask. Tell tale signs are drinking water, busy dancing with certain dancers, and too many others to list. It is really been contextually aware of the floor dynamics in play.I usually find girls who don’t show interest at the start (even when they say yes) don’t show interest in the dance.
How do you detect that or how does a guy detect that? Guys to whom that happens are mostly unaware of it. I know a couple of such guys.2) I would dispute. Girls often say yes to guys that they don’t really want to dance with.
3) I would again disagree. At small parties when everyone has grabbed someone and there is one girl left if she says no then you miss a dance. Of course, at larger parties this doesn’t happen so much.
So you meant it happens a lot that someone says unwillingly yes and then dances without any interest?It happened a lot unfortunately
Usually when people know each other and don’t want to create off floor unsocial tension? Like a high status guy (organizer, dj, a local top dog) asking or a friend asking?This happens more than people would like to admit
When was last time you got a “pity” dance ? I can’t remember. In my beginner days I never put myself in a position to get pity dance.
If you ask any follower, they will probably have stories of saying yes to bad dancers (I won't get into the reasons, but they are numerous)
Good find! Plenty of information in the link. From the article:yesterday I found out that there is even a disease name for this https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/24099-rejection-sensitive-dysphoria-rsd and drugs help for many people.
May be there is a more benign and milder form of RS which manifests as Rejection Anxiety.
Sometimes I do have a mild anxiety of anticipating a rejection. That has been constant since I started dancing. It didn’t impact my dancing and from beginner days I had no problem asking most people. I also avoided asking certain people - a tiny number which included followers who were a lot more advance than me back then. I wonder if all this is normal.
I wonder if all this is normal.
Actually that doesn’t affect me. I will ask that person during the course of the social and they have almost said yes.How's your tolerance towards people who reject your friends?
Sometimes when I hear about a good dancer who rejects my friend (who isn't bad, just not high level), I develop some anxiety to ask this person because I know they have higher standards.
Isn't this basically a sign of a not so great dancer? Unable to dance of out the bubble where everyone knows everyone's style. I'm not criticizing, I've done this too - purely out of necessity, rather than deliberate choice. Same for my mates I assume, we wouldn't get many dances out of our bubble.- London followers dancing with London leaders at festivals (doesn’t give anxiety but couldn’t resist this one)
- younger followers dancing with younger leads (rare in salsa, more in tango)
- dancing only with their team mates or surrounded by teammates all the time if not dancing
- dancing continously with same person or two.
With experienced dancers it's usually preference for good dances or their own safety.Isn't this basically a sign of a not so great dancer? Unable to dance of out the bubble where everyone knows everyone's style. I'm not criticizing, I've done this too - purely out of necessity, rather than deliberate choice. Same for my mates I assume, we wouldn't get many dances out of our bubble.
Absolutely understand this point - though most high level dancers I know would simply scan the room and pick people out, even on the dancefloor. So they would essentially go for the best, rather than sticking to only those that are around for ages. Nobody I considered seriously good would stick to classmates (as they wouldn't have any, no need to take classes) or stick to the same people over and over again. But this might be different in every community.With experienced dancers it's usually preference for good dances or their own safety.
Absolutely understand this point - though most high level dancers I know would simply scan the room and pick people out, even on the dancefloor. So they would essentially go for the best, rather than sticking to only those that are around for ages. Nobody I considered seriously good would stick to classmates (as they wouldn't have any, no need to take classes) or stick to the same people over and over again. But this might be different in every community.