Embrace
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
The way partners hold each other in closed position — the physical container for connection, communication, and trust.
Intermediate focus
Now learn to modulate the embrace dynamically. Close it for body waves and sensual passages. Open it for turns and styling moments. The transition between open and closed should be seamless — no jerking, no sudden grabs. Practice maintaining connection even as the distance changes. Your embrace should have 'tone' — like a muscle that's engaged but not rigid. Work on matching your partner's energy: if they soften, you soften. If they engage more, you respond.
Tips
- •Check in with your hands every song — are you gripping? Consciously soften 10%
- •Your embrace should adjust to every partner — smaller frame, lighter touch; bigger frame, more structure
- •Practice the basic step in embrace with eyes closed to feel how much information the embrace actually carries
Common mistakes
- •Death grip — squeezing your partner's hand or back like you're hanging off a cliff
- •Spaghetti arms — zero tone in the frame, so signals get lost
- •Placing the right hand too low on the follower's back — this limits your leverage and can feel invasive
- •Looking at your hand connection instead of your partner or the space around you
Practice drill
With a partner, dance a full basic step with eyes closed. Leader: can you feel when the follower shifts weight? Follower: can you feel the leader's intention before they step? If yes, your embrace is communicating. If not, experiment with slightly more frame tone until the signal is clear. Do this for one full song.