Intermediate

Counter-Balance

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

Both partners leaning away from each other with shared weight, creating movements impossible to do alone.

Intermediate focus

Take the static counter-balance into movement. Both partners lean away, then the leader slowly shifts the shared center to the right — both partners travel right while maintaining the lean. Then shift left. Now try it during a basic step: approach counter-balance on counts 1-2, maximum lean on 3, recover on 4. This dynamic counter-balance is the foundation for all the dramatic movements that come next.

Tips

  • Start small. A 5-degree lean with perfect control is better than a 30-degree lean with wobbling.
  • Keep your core engaged throughout — your abs and back muscles are what prevent the lean from becoming a collapse.
  • Always establish the counter-balance before adding movement. Static stability first, dynamic movement second.

Common mistakes

  • Only one partner committing to the lean — counter-balance requires equal and opposite force from both dancers.
  • Gripping hands too tightly — the connection should be firm but not crushing. Use the full hand, not just fingers.
  • Attempting counter-balance without a stable base — your feet must be firmly planted before you lean.
  • Going too deep too fast — build the lean gradually, maintaining control throughout.

Practice drill

Wrist-to-wrist hold, both partners leaning back at a comfortable angle. Now the leader slowly squats while the follower maintains their lean — the leader's lowering creates a natural dip position. Return by the leader standing back up. Do this 10 times, progressively going lower. This builds the strength, trust, and calibration needed for social dance counter-balance moves.

Related terms