Yo-Yo
A figure where the follower is sent out and snapped back like a yo-yo on a string — dynamic, playful, and all about timing.
Why it matters
The yo-yo teaches elastic connection management. It's the most direct training tool for understanding that the connection between partners isn't rigid — it stretches, stores energy, and rebounds. Leaders learn to send with control and receive with absorption. Followers learn to ride momentum outward and allow the connection to bring them back without adding their own energy. This elastic awareness transfers to every figure that involves distance changes between partners.
The yo-yo sends the follower outward from the leader to arm's length, then brings her back in, mimicking the out-and-back motion of a yo-yo. The key is the elastic quality: the outward send has a defined endpoint where the connection stretches but doesn't break, and the return uses the stored elastic energy in the arm connection to bring the follower back naturally. It's not a push-and-pull; it's a send-and-receive. The follower should feel like she's on a bungee cord — smoothly decelerated at the far point and accelerated back without jarring.
Beginner
From open hold, leader: on count 1, step back and send the follower outward by extending your arm smoothly. She should travel until the arm connection reaches comfortable extension — not pulling, just stretched. On count 5, the natural elastic tension brings her back toward you. Don't yank; let the connection do the work. Your arm is the string; let the yo-yo come back on its own. Receive her arrival with soft compression in your arm.
Intermediate
Add a follower's spin at the far point of the yo-yo — she arrives at arm's length, spins, and returns. Practice varying the send distance: a short yo-yo (half arm's length) versus a long yo-yo (full extension). Chain yo-yos with fans: yo-yo out, fan left, yo-yo back. Play with the speed: a slow, sultry yo-yo over 8 counts for slow sections versus a sharp, rhythmic yo-yo over 4 counts for upbeat passages.
Advanced
The yo-yo becomes a rhythmic engine. Send-return, send-return, send-with-spin-return — each version a different musical interpretation. Use the return momentum to feed into the next figure: yo-yo return into a cuddle entry, into a cross-wrap, into a spiral. Play with fake yo-yos: initiate the send, then redirect before full extension, keeping the follower guessing. The advanced yo-yo has multiple possible endpoints, and the leader chooses in real time based on the music.
Tips
- •Imagine the arm connection is a rubber band. You stretch it out, and it naturally wants to return. Work with that elastic quality, not against it.
- •The send should decelerate as the follower reaches the far point — don't accelerate all the way to full extension.
- •Follower: let the connection bring you back. Your job on the return is to maintain your axis while traveling, not to rush back to the leader.
Common mistakes
- •Jerking the follower back instead of letting the elastic connection bring her back naturally
- •Sending too hard, pulling the follower off balance at the far point
- •Follower adding her own forward energy on the return, arriving too fast and crashing into the leader
- •Not maintaining the basic step timing through the send and return phases
Practice drill
20 yo-yos in a row: 10 with a spin at the far point, 10 without. Leader focuses on the send quality (smooth, decelerating). Follower focuses on the return quality (elastic, not rushed). Rate each yo-yo together. Goal: 8 out of 10 feel effortless.
The science▶
The yo-yo demonstrates elastic potential energy storage in the arm connection. When the leader sends the follower outward, energy is stored in the stretched arm muscles and tendons (series elastic component). At the far point, this stored energy reverses into kinetic energy that pulls the follower back. The efficiency of this energy return depends on the stiffness of the arm connection — too rigid and energy dissipates as heat (muscle strain), too loose and no energy is stored. The optimal arm tone feels like a slightly stretched rubber band.
Cultural context
The yo-yo is universal in partner dance — it appears in swing (the send-out), in salsa (the cross-body lead with extension), and in ballroom (the throwaway oversway). In bachata, the yo-yo gained prominence in moderna and sensual styles as dancers sought more dynamic spatial patterns. In social dancing, the yo-yo is a crowd-pleaser because the outward extension creates visual drama on a packed floor — it's one of the few figures that makes space around a couple.
See also
An open-position figure where the follower sweeps outward like a fan unfolding — spacious, visual, and musically satisfying.
Open HoldA partner position connected only through the hands, creating space for turns, shines, and independent movement.
Push-PullThe alternating compression and extension between partners that creates dynamic movement and clear directional signals.
WhipA sharp, accelerating lead that sends the follower outward or into a turn with a crack-the-whip energy transfer.