Pivot Turn
in San Juan 🇵🇷
Turning on one foot — the foundation underneath every turn in bachata, and what separates spinning from actually turning.
Why it matters
If you want to turn well, you need to pivot well. Period. Every hour you spend on pivot technique will pay dividends in every single turn you ever do. It's the highest-ROI investment in your dance training.
A pivot turn is any rotation where you stay on one foot and spin around it like a compass needle. It sounds simple because it is simple — but simple doesn't mean easy. The pivot is the atomic unit of turning. Every inside turn, outside turn, copa, and spinning combination is built from pivots. A dancer with clean pivots looks effortless. A dancer with messy pivots looks like they're fighting gravity.
Beginner
Stand on the ball of one foot. Arms close to your body. Push gently off the other foot and try to rotate 180 degrees. Key points: stay on the ball of the foot (not the heel), keep your core tight, and look where you're going (spotting).
Intermediate
Practice 360-degree pivots. Then doubles (720). Work on both feet — most dancers have a strong side and a weak side. Close the gap. Add pivots into your social dancing: a pivot exit from a cross-body lead, a pivot entry into a wrap.
Advanced
Pivots become invisible. You can pivot at any speed, in any direction, from any position. Your balance is so solid that you can stop mid-pivot and hold. Chained pivots (multiple rotations) have consistent speed and axis.
Practice drill
Set a coin on the floor. Stand on the ball of your right foot next to it. Do 10 pivots (180 degrees each). Your foot should still be next to the coin. Switch feet. Repeat daily until you can do 10 pivots without traveling.
Pivot Turn in San Juan
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