Home Blog
February 2010


Grounded PDF Print E-mail

There are several words in the Tango lexicon that are often used. If you have been around the tango circle more than once or twice, you've heard them. "Connection", "Present", "Embrace",  "Grounded" etc. It is somewhat dangerous to discuss these words because it is easy to step into a cliche or push over someone's sacred cow, but I will attemp it. Last week I posted about "Connection" and a few of my ideas on what connection is and how to achieve it. This week I am going to write about being "Grounded."

Some questions emerge immediately. What is grounding? How can it be achieved or improved? Is it different for lead and follow? How do you know when you or your partner is grounded? First, a definition: Being "grounded" is the active state of being present, aware, and unhurried. The essence is  the same for both lead and follow, though there might be slightly different expressions in practice. Groundedness can be distinguished from other, related concepts such as "connection" or "balance" in that connection is the bridge between the partners, balance is the suspension cables which support the structure, but groundedness are the pylons which sink deep into the riverbed  and support everything else.

Let's take each part of this definition in turn: present, aware, and unhurried. First, being present. This means that in order to be grounded you are not holding on to the step you just took that you thought was great or awful nor are you striving to take a better or fearing a worse step in the next moment. You are simply there. This is related to mindfulness, of course, but there is more to it. Secondly, aware: aware of your partner and your self. Aware of the stresses and impluses you are giving and receiving and matching, balancing, compensating for them so that you are stable, primarily, and that your partner is also stable, secondarily. You must be grounded before you can hope to support or ground your partner.

Finally, be unhurried. This is not the same as being slow. Steps can be fast and unhurried or slow and hurried. If you have ever watched a juggler juggling it seems like there are too many objects moving too fast, yet the juggler himself appears relaxed as he catches and releases each one. Think about "dwell time," each step taking its full measure of time and attention to execute. Dwell time on each step and between each step. Savor each step. Tango is slow food for the soul.

 

See you at the milonga. 

 
Clear intention PDF Print E-mail

In class I often talk about connection, lead and folllow, in terms of attention and intention. That is, connection is what happens when the lead and follow are paying attention to each other. Their full attention. This is part of the magic of tango, the expectation that for the duration of at least this one song, this one dance, you will give the entirety of your attention to the other person. Not later. There is no later in tango, nor is there a before. There is only right now.  It is being here in this moment with this reciprocal attention which allows everything else to flow.

The second aspect of connection is intention. The lead forms a clear idea of what is desired. Without a single, clear intention the follow has no hope of following the lead. It would be like trying to watch three shows at once having two conversations simultaneously. Maybe, sort of, kinda okay but neither conversation is  very good and everyone feels slighted in the end.

Furthermore, these ideas or intentions must follow one at a time. The difficulty is clear: often, for the lead, the  ideas come so fast and furious and sorting out which one is the best or which one to do next is a tricky proposition. Or the opposite situation could obtain: there are only one or two ideas, but deciding between them or expressing them clearly is the problem. The first is the besetting sin of the intermediate lead, the second is the persistent bedevilement of the beginning lead. The sword which slays them both is the same: attention. Slow down and attend to the follow whose actions mirror your thoughts as the lake reflects the cloud. Slow down, pay attention, and the same wind that moves you will move her.

Last Updated on Monday, 01 February 2010 11:16