Lean
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A shared weight figure where both partners angle away from each other, held together by mutual counterbalance.
Intermediate focus
Increase the angle and experiment with different hand holds: single hand, forearm-to-forearm, body-to-body. Practice entering leans from movement — a traveling step that resolves into a lean is more dynamic than a stationary one. Add a shared body wave in the lean position. Start practicing leans in one direction (both leaning left, for example) rather than only symmetrical away-from-each-other leans.
Tips
- •Your body from ankle to shoulder should form a straight diagonal line. If you're hinging at the hips, you're bending, not leaning.
- •Start every lean with eye contact. The visual connection anchors the physical one.
- •Exit the lean slower than you entered it. The return to center should be savored, not snapped.
Common mistakes
- •Bending at the waist instead of leaning as a unit from the ankles — the body should be a straight plank
- •Gripping the partner's hands desperately instead of maintaining firm but relaxed contact
- •Going too deep too fast before establishing trust and counterbalance alignment
- •One partner giving significantly more weight than the other, creating an asymmetric and unstable lean
Practice drill
Face your partner, single hand hold. Lean out to 15 degrees and hold for 8 counts. Increase to 25 degrees and hold for 8 counts. Now lean left together, then right together, then one up and one down. Cycle through all four variations. This 2-minute drill covers the full vocabulary of lean directions and builds trust systematically.