Axis
in Amsterdam 🇳🇱
The invisible vertical line running through your body from head to feet — your center of rotation and the foundation of all balanced movement.
Why it matters
Every turn, every pivot, every body roll either respects or challenges your axis. Without axis awareness, turns wobble, body waves collapse sideways, and partner work becomes a mutual rescue mission. A strong axis lets you move with freedom and confidence because you always know where center is — even when you're deliberately far from it.
Your axis is the imaginary line that runs from the crown of your head straight down through your spine and into the floor. When you're 'on axis,' your weight is stacked vertically and you can rotate, isolate, or change direction without losing balance. In bachata, your axis isn't always perfectly vertical — sensual movements deliberately take you off axis — but you need to own your vertical axis first before you can safely leave it. Think of it as your home base: you leave, you explore, you come back.
Beginner
Stand on one foot. That wobble you feel? That's your body searching for its axis. Now engage your core, press gently through the standing foot, and find the stillness. That's your axis. In bachata basics, practice keeping your weight centered over each foot as you transfer — no leaning forward, no sitting back. Your ear, shoulder, hip, and ankle should stack in a vertical line.
Intermediate
Your axis now becomes dynamic. During turns, pull everything tight to the center line — arms in, core engaged, head spotting. The tighter your mass is to the axis, the faster and more controlled your rotation. Practice single turns with arms crossed on chest — if you can spin cleanly without arms for counterbalance, your axis is solid. In partner work, maintain your own axis — don't lean into your partner for support.
Advanced
Now you play with axis intentionally. Off-axis leans, cambré, fall-and-catch — these all require knowing exactly where your axis is so you can leave it safely and return. Practice slow off-axis tilts: lean away from vertical, hold, come back. Your core and standing leg do all the work. In partner work, you share axis responsibility — sometimes supporting your partner's off-axis moment while maintaining your own center.
Practice drill
Stand on your right foot, core engaged, arms relaxed at sides. Slowly rotate 360 degrees without putting the left foot down. Repeat on the left. If you can do a clean, controlled full turn on each foot without hopping or wobbling, your axis is strong. Work up to two consecutive rotations.
Axis in Amsterdam
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