🇫🇷 ParisLearnPush-Pull

Push-Pull

in Paris 🇫🇷

Beginner

The alternating compression and extension between partners that creates dynamic movement and clear directional signals.

Why it matters

Every single lead in bachata is a push, a pull, or a combination of both. Cross-body lead? Push, then pull. Turn? Push to initiate rotation, pull to bring them back. Body wave? Compression wave. If you understand push-pull deeply, you can reverse-engineer any pattern by identifying its push and pull components. It's the periodic table of partner dance — the fundamental elements from which everything else is built.

Push-pull is the foundational mechanic of partner dance communication. It's the alternating cycle of compression (pushing energy toward your partner) and extension (drawing energy away) that creates movement, direction changes, and dynamic flow between two bodies. When a leader pushes gently through the frame, the follower moves away. When the leader pulls (creates tension), the follower moves toward. This simple binary is the basis of every pattern in bachata. But push-pull is not about literally pushing and pulling with your arms. The energy originates from the leader's center of mass — a forward body shift creates compression, a backward shift creates extension. The arms and frame are merely the pipeline that delivers this energy to the follower. When done correctly, push-pull feels like a wave passing between two bodies. When done with arms alone, it feels like being shoved. Push-pull exists on a spectrum: from barely perceptible (the subtle compression that initiates a basic step direction change) to dramatic (the full extension that launches a follower into a spinning turn).

Beginner

Stand facing your partner in closed hold. Leader: shift your weight slightly forward (not your arms — your whole body). The follower should feel a gentle compression through the frame and step back. Now shift your weight back. The follower feels extension and steps forward. That's push-pull. The arms didn't do anything — they just maintained shape while your body created the signal. Practice this forward-back conversation for five minutes before adding it to any pattern.

Intermediate

Start using push-pull for direction changes in your basic step. At the end of a phrase moving right, a subtle push redirects the follower to the left. Before a turn, a pull creates the stretch that loads the rotational energy. Practice the timing: the push or pull should arrive one beat before you want the follower to move, giving them time to receive and process the signal.

Advanced

Advanced push-pull becomes elastic — you can stretch the connection, hold the tension, and release it at the perfect musical moment. This is how musicality-leading works: you compress on the build-up, hold during the tension, and release on the drop. The follower feels the musical architecture through your push-pull dynamics. You can also layer multiple push-pull channels: torso for the main lead, hands for secondary signals, creating rich, multi-layered communication.

Practice drill

Stand facing your partner, both hands connected palm-to-palm (no grip). Leader creates a slow push. Follower retreats one step. Leader creates a slow pull. Follower advances one step. No music, no timing pressure — just feel the push and pull as pure energy exchange. Do this for 5 minutes. Then add music. Then add it to your basic step. The order matters: feel first, dance second.

Push-Pull in Paris

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Sources: The Physics of Partner Dance — Kenneth Laws · La Marca in Tango: Parallels to Latin Dance Leading — Dance Research Quarterly