Tango Frustration

Contrary to what you may have heard, the reality of Tango for some people is, as a Lead as well as a Follow, is not all happy and lovely. The fact is that some of those dancers go to the Milonga knowing that they are going to sit, a lot. And that sitting leads a winding path through a host of emotions that ultimately lands them on the door step of Tango Frustration.

One reason why someone gets to the door step of Tango Frustration is the obvious part, there’s no one to dance with. To be clear, there are plenty of people to dance with. It’s just that for these folks, for a variety of reasons, there aren’t any. Either the available possible partners are too compressive in their embrace, they’ll wander all over the floor, they can’t find a beat to save their lives, they hang, they pull, they push, they chat at them while dancing, they correct their dance while dancing with them, they ask for feedback at a milonga, they have bad breath, they reek of body odor or too much perfume. They’d love to dance if these things weren’t happening…but they are.

One more reason why someone gets to Tango Frustration is because there aren’t any partners that want to dance with them, so as a direct result of this, said dancer ends up sitting or standing around a lot and not dancing. This is never more prominent than in the Row of Women That Sit or the Row or Men That Stand.

Another reason why Tango Frustration occurs is that there are too few ‘good’ dancers that accept their Cabeceo or Mirada. While this topic is not going to discuss the very probable reasons why this happens, as has already been mentioned inMirada: Asking A Man To Dance, or Cabeceo: Asking A Woman To Dance, or Lead Bashing, or Follower Bashing. No, today’s Tango Thought is about managing the frustration that occurs for a lot of dancers.

More than likely the frustration comes from one’s own expectation. The expectation that you’re going to get dances. It’s not a crazy idea that you’re at a Milonga to … dare it be said, to … eeek…. dance! So therefore it’s not out of the realm of possibility that you dance. Crazy right ? However, the expectation is that you’re going to dance often. This is the beginning of the expectation and the pathway that leads to frustration.

The fact is that the better we become, the more choosey we become, while at the same time, we also dance less, not more. At the same time, the better we think we are (operative word in the sentence ‘think’, which is actually part of the problem with the expectation), we tend towards believing that we ‘deserve’ better and more frequent dances than the flavor of the month or with the flavor of the month for that matter. Again these are expectations, and really comparisons that others are doing more while we sit tapping our feet to the beat of a really good tanda! 🙁

At the same time we really do need to learn to manage our expectations that we’re not going to dance a lot, and instead focus on other things: The music, conversation with others, engaging in the social aspects of the dance really. There’s a reason why it’s called a “Social Dance”, and this is it. While you’re there to dance, you’re also there to be friendly with other people, chat, hang out, getting to know others. More than likely they’re experiencing the same thing you are. They’re not dancing right now, and are wondering if they suck, of why ‘X’ isn’t dancing with them today and they danced with them before, why not now ? You’re probably going through the same series of questions in your minds. Misery loves company. So here’s a good idea, talk about it with others, you may find that you’re having the same issues.

One way that we can change our expectations, and actually have a bit more fun, is to swap shoes, and swap roles, and dance that way. At least you’re dancing, and besides you might learn something about your own role in the process. Swapping roles may seem like heresy or you can’t do that or whatever story you’ve told yourself, but the reality is that swapping roles is more accepted today than anything else. It allows for a more well rounded dancing experience, and at the same time can and does teach you a lot about why things work they way that they do, which can factually change your dance.

Still another way that we can change our expectations is to take a little break from the Milonga environment, go outside, step away from the Milonga for a bit. It’s not going to kill you if you miss a tanda or two or even three. The funny thing is that there is always another milonga, and another tanda somewhere down the line. Don’t get wrapped up in having to have this tanda with that partner. Instead take a little break and get some air.

One more method that is quite popular, drowning your sorrows in a glass of wine. NOT. It does work. However, it does not solve the ultimate problem. The reason why you’re not dancing and how to solve for ‘X’.

Let’s assume for the moment that the following is true: You’re currently taking private lessons to clean up your issues. And have been for a while. Either through a private Tango Intensive, or with a series of local teachers. And you ‘feel’ that you’ve improved. The problem is still with you to a limited degree, you have Tango Baggage. Meaning that there are people out there that have a perception of you and how you dance, and that perception is not going to change any time soon. That is > unless you have a teacher that is actively working on changing your Tango Baggage. Meaing that they’re out there dancing with you and showing you off on a regular basis. People do witness this. They do see that you’re dancing with X who doesn’t dance with just anyone. Honestly this one is going to take a while to fix. Baggage ,once loaded up, is hard to dispel and takes a few months to a year or so of ‘change’ to fix the social side of the problem. The social side ? That’s where your technique may have improved, but you still carry around people’s perceptions of what you dance like. 

Let’s assume again the same parameters as above, only in this instance, the issue isn’t necessarily your baggage, but really the community you dance in. You’ve reached your limit of what’s acceptable. In this case, the only real solution to this problem is to get out of town, immediately. You need to travel. Honestly, doing so will open your Tango horizons on multiple levels. And to be clear, this is Traveling for Tango. This is not necessarily going to Buenos Aires, but rather getting outside your local scene, and often. Like for instance, if you’re a Boston dancer, go to New York, or Montreal. If you’re New York dancer, go to Buffalo, Ithaca, DC, or Montreal. If you’re a San Francisco dancer, you want to head to LA or Portland, or Seattle. And the same with those dancers from those cities. Swap it up. IF you’re Berlin dancer, head Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, or Stuttgart. Or if you wanted to go international (still assuming you’re from Berlin), then Amsterdam, Paris, Prague, Florence, Budapest, or Vienna awaits just to name a few. Or if you want to jump on the marathon circuit, start signing up for the marathons, about 6 to 9 months in advance of the actual date of the event. There are loads of options here without having to leave the relative confines of your native continent. The whole idea is to travel, go experience other tango communities. The downside to this is that no one knows you. The upside to this is that no one knows you. There are trade offs in either direction. However, you’ll no longer be faced with the same 50 people at your local milongas.

These are just some ideas as to how to manage your Tango Frustration, more to follow later. There are other ‘more radical’ ideas.

MORE REMINDERS

Facility

Facility can be, but is not limited to, Familiarity with Vocabulary, Execution of the Vocabulary, also it’s about Balance, Equilibrium, Kinesthetic Awareness, Kinesthetic Listening, The Neurology of Leading, The Neurology of Following (which is how you respond to something from a follower’s perspective), Proprioception, and last but not least Extending Your Capabilities. We’ll get to that last one in just a bit. Two of the more common aspects of Facility are Execution and Proprioception. So let’s quickly review what Tango Topics means when it refers to these ideas…“

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Toe vs. Heel (Follower) ?

In case you have been living under a rock, this Thought is going to shock you somewhat. There is a debate that has been raging for quite some time now. The debate ? Should the Follower step forward with their heel first, or their toe first ? Better known as the Heel or Toe debate only for Followers, not for Leads as is the usual debated topic.

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The Unseen

There is an unspoken, unwritten rule with regards to Argentine Tango. Actually there are a few of them. However, one of them is that once you are acknowledged you are now persona grata. However, if you are NOT acknowledged….then you are Persona Non-Grata. You don’t exist. They don’t see you. And the more that you stand in front of them, the less that they’ll see you. You are the ‘Unseen’.

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Follower’s Left Arm

You’re going to see this, and quite honestly, from a whole swath of Followers from your run of the mill local social dancer to professional doing this. Is this desirable ? No. Why ? Several reasons. Two of the more common reasons:

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Rejection

What follows relates to the verbal ask for a dance and the rejection, this thought does not talk about the reject from a failed cabeceo or mirada. Let’s lay out some facts before we get to the heart of this stuff. Fact: The ask, no matter how ‘sly’ you think you’re being, is going to be awkward.

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Body Contortion

A good portion of people come into the embrace, Lead or Follow, and in one way, shape, or form, contort their bodies to make the dance work while dancing, rather than employ proper technique.

Contort ? Yes. For example: As a Lead or Follow they might dance with a ‘head tilt‘ towards (buried into) or away from their partner, or as a Lead they’ll employ ‘waiter arm and hand’, or as a Follower they’ll dance in their Lead’s armpit, twisting their body to the side, and un-leveling their shoulders. This is contortion. 

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Floorcraft

What is Floorcraft ? In it’s simplest form, as there layers and layers to this stuff, it is how to navigate the floor while dancing with your partner and not hitting the couples ahead, or behind you. As well as not touching the tables, and chairs. All the while interpreting the music, concurrently interpreting the beat and the musical pauses to fit the tango vocabulary while maintaining the spacing between the couples.

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Presentation Tango

There is a very popular idea in Tango that gets paraded around a lot, an idea which gets confused with Social Tango which is NOT Social Tango at all but rather it’s about the steps, patterns, and figures is known as ‘Show’ Tango, ’Scenario’ Tango, ‘Stage’ Tango, ‘Fantasia’ Tango, or Presentation Tango.

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Tango Reputation

No matter how hard you try (positively or negatively) you’re going to acquire a ‘Tango Reputation’. Meaning ? How you engage socially, how you dance, who you dance with, how ‘good’ you are, how often you dance, if you teach, where you teach, who you teach with, whether or not (if you teach) you dance only with your students or with others, if you teach others while dancing (tsk, tsk, tsk), whether or not you dance milonga, how good your milonga skills are, whether or not you lead and follow or not.

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The Practica

The idea of a Practica is ‘theoretically’ to Practice what you have learned. To try out what you have been shown, with multiple partners, as if you were in a class rotation. It is ‘theoretical’ because while the theory is nice, the reality is a little different.

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Keep something in the back of your mind: What you’re seeing in a youtube video is a couple that is performing for the 15th row for a room full of people. They’re not social dancingWhereas this website is all about ‘Social Tango’  or how to make things function on a social dance floor. Social Dance floor ? Your local milonga! They are showing you flashy moves as a presentation, to show off! But not stopping and talking about how this works which is what you need to see. This website and all of it’s content show you the how and  why you’d want to put that piece of vocabulary there, or how to make things work. This website is all about those things and more!

You could watch Tango YouTube videos and thereby spend your time, trying to infer, and figure out how things may work in that particular situation. Bend your body this way or that, twist and force this position or that. Place your foot here or there and figure it out. This is known as Tango Twister.  Which can be a lot of fun, but more than likely it won’t help you, because you’re missing something: The explanation from an experienced teacher showing you how to properly excute this stuff from a Leading Perspective as well as from a Following Perspective!

The goal of YouTube videos is to get you to study with those teachers in person. The goal of Tango Topics videos allows you to work at your own pace, in the comfort of your own space, so that you can play them over and over again to improve your understanding of the vocabulary or technique being described to therefore better your dancing experience. The goal of classes and workshops is to get you to come back over and over and over again, thereby spending more money with that teacher. This website and the videos under it are here to act as a resource for you to help you to improve your dance. Pay once and you’re done.

Eventually, one way or another you’re going to pay for this lesson, either here and now, or with them. TANSTAAFL! The difference between that lesson and this ? Is that you get to play this lesson over and over and over again. Further still, there are supporting materials (other videos) that help to explain the language and the underlying technique of how and why things work, so you can easily reference those things in the corresponding articles that go with the material, and or any language in the Tango Topics Dictionary. 

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