Grounding
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
Grounding is the art of using the floor as your dance partner — push into it, and it pushes back with power.
Beginner focus
Take off your shoes and stand on a wooden or tile floor. Spread your toes, feel the full surface of your foot making contact. Now press down slightly, as if you're trying to leave a footprint. Feel the floor push back up through your legs. That sensation is grounding. Now put your dance shoes on and try to recreate it. Practice your basic step pressing down on each weight change.
Tips
- •Practice barefoot on grass or sand occasionally. Natural surfaces force you to feel grounding because there's no shoe to rely on.
- •Imagine your feet have suction cups on the bottom. Each step should feel like you're engaging the suction, not just placing your foot.
- •Listen to your footfalls. If you can hear your steps loudly, you're stomping. If there's no sound at all, you might be floating. Grounding has a soft, deliberate sound.
Common mistakes
- •Dancing on the toes exclusively — this eliminates grounding and creates instability
- •Stomping instead of pressing — grounding is continuous connection, not impact
- •Losing grounding during turns by rising up onto the ball of the foot without maintaining floor pressure
Practice drill
Dance an entire song using only the basic step with maximal grounding. Press into the floor on every step as if you're trying to push the building down one inch. Feel how this changes your posture, your core, and your connection to the music. Then gradually dial it back to about 60% — that's your social dancing grounding level.