Back-leading
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
Back-leading is when the follower anticipates and executes before the lead arrives — the most common bad habit that masquerades as good dancing.
Intermediate focus
This is where back-leading becomes most dangerous. You've learned enough patterns to predict what comes next, and your body wants to 'help' by going there automatically. Fight this urge. The test: dance with a leader you've never met, on music you've never heard. If you find yourself doing the same combinations as always, you're back-leading. If the dance surprises you, you're following.
Tips
- •Practice following with eyes closed. Without visual prediction, you're forced to rely on physical signals only.
- •Dance with leaders below your level. If you can follow a clear lead from a beginner without adding your own agenda, your following is genuine.
- •When you catch yourself back-leading, don't be harsh — just pause internally, reset to neutral, and wait for the next signal.
Common mistakes
- •Starting turns at the beginning of every phrase because 'that's when turns happen' — wait for the lead
- •Completing a combination automatically when you recognize the opening moves — maybe the leader has a different plan
- •Tensing up in preparation for what you think is coming — this resistance changes the leader's signal quality
Practice drill
The 'surprise drill': Ask a leader to deliberately break patterns. Start what feels like a cross-body lead but redirect into a basic. Start what feels like a right turn but convert it to a left turn. As the follower, your job is to follow what actually happens, not what you expected. Every surprise that catches you is a back-lead you didn't know you had.