Intermediate
Dissociation
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
The ability to move your upper body independently from your lower body — like two books rotating on the same spine in opposite directions.
Intermediate focus
Integrate dissociation into your dance. During a basic step, try rotating your chest slightly toward your partner while your hips stay square to the direction of travel. In body waves, dissociation adds a twist that makes the wave three-dimensional.
Tips
- •Yoga twists are your best friend. Any seated or standing twist builds the exact muscle patterns you need for dance dissociation.
- •Practice in front of a mirror: your belt buckle should point one direction while your chest points another
Common mistakes
- •Forcing it with shoulders instead of initiating from the core
- •Losing hip stability — dissociation requires a stable base
- •Only practicing one direction — both sides need equal work
Practice drill
Stand with feet planted. Put your hands on your hips to lock them. Rotate your chest 45 degrees left, then 45 degrees right, 20 times. Now reverse: lock your chest and rotate your hips. Do this daily for 2 weeks and your dance will transform.