Intermediate

Lead with Intention

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

Your body knows where it's going before it moves — the mental clarity that turns mechanical leading into intuitive communication.

Intermediate focus

Extend your intention further ahead. Instead of thinking one figure at a time, think in phrases: 'This 8-count, I'll move to the right. Next 8-count, I'll lead a turn. Following 8-count, body movement.' This planning allows your leads to flow because each figure sets up the next. The follower feels a narrative, not a series of disconnected events.

Tips

  • Before asking someone to dance, listen to 8 counts of the song and form an intention for the opening. Walking onto the floor with a plan, even a simple one, changes the dance from the first moment.
  • Practice 'intention broadcasting': stand in front of a mirror and think about moving right — without actually moving. Notice the micro-adjustments your body makes. THAT is what followers feel.
  • After a dance, ask yourself: was I leading or was I reacting? The percentage of intentional vs. reactive moments tells you where you are on the mastery curve.

Common mistakes

  • Leading reactively — deciding what to do only after the previous figure ends, creating gaps in the flow
  • Having intention without commitment — knowing what you want but leading it hesitantly, creating ambiguous signals
  • Over-planning to the point of ignoring the music and the follower — intention should be responsive, not rigid

Practice drill

Dance a full song where you plan every 8-count phrase in advance. During counts 5-8 of each phrase, decide what happens in the NEXT phrase. This overlap — executing the current idea while planning the next — is the core skill of intentional leading. It's mentally exhausting at first. That fatigue is the feeling of your brain building new neural pathways.

Related terms