Flow
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
The seamless, unbroken continuity of movement where every action naturally leads into the next — the 'liquid' quality of expert dancing.
Intermediate focus
Develop transition mastery. The flow lives in transitions, not in the movements themselves. Practice specific transitions: basic step into body wave (how does your stepping motion become a wave?), body wave into turn (how does the wave's energy redirect into rotation?), turn into hip roll (how does the rotational energy become circular?). Each transition should be practiced until it's as smooth as the movements it connects.
Tips
- •Think of your movement as a river — it always moves forward, sometimes fast, sometimes slow, sometimes straight, sometimes winding. But it never stops
- •Practice 'continuous movement': put on a song and never stop moving for the entire duration. No poses, no pauses. This forces flow
- •Watch water flowing over rocks — it never fights the obstacle, it flows around it. Apply this principle to partner work
Common mistakes
- •Confusing flow with lack of dynamics — flow doesn't mean everything is smooth. You can flow between a sharp accent and a soft wave
- •Forcing transitions that don't work — some movements don't naturally connect. It's okay to have brief neutral moments
- •Prioritizing flow over musicality — if the music stops, you stop. Flow serves the music, not the other way around
- •Only flowing in solo movement and breaking flow during partner interactions — partner work should flow too
Practice drill
Put on a bachata song. Start with the basic step. Every 4 counts, change to a different movement (body wave, hip roll, arm styling, turn, chest circle, etc.). The rule: NO pauses between changes. The ending of one movement IS the beginning of the next. If you catch yourself stopping and restarting, slow down the transitions until they're smooth, then rebuild speed. One full song of continuous movement change.