I like to think of it as meaning the dancers are happy, because they are 
chatting instead of fussing.  I say hands four, as you line up, consult the 
band re tunes, say it again.  If they still appear disorganized, I'll pick a 
random move like N Allemande L , or Cir L all the way.  They think I'm teaching 
the dance, so scramble to get hands four.  Then I can say, OK, now that you 
have hands 4, here's what you really do.  Usually they are a little quicker 
after that.  Will they ever just take hands four automatically?  I seriously 
doubt it.  Not in this country.  The Danes are rumored to line themselves up 
silently.  We are more unruly in general.
Best luck
Andrea
Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 12, 2012, at 8:38 PM, Kalia Kliban <[email protected]> wrote:

> This may have been discussed before, but why does the idea that they should 
> take hands four seem to come as a complete surprise to at least half the 
> dancers, every single freakin' time?
> 
> It's not hard.  You can do it while you're talking.  It's a complete and 
> total no-brainer for contemporary contras.  And yet...
> 
> Anyone have successful strategies for helping this process along that doesn't 
> involve specially-trained dogs?
> 
> Kalia
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