Myk said: > Picture a rock and roller, or a salsa dancer. Don't see many in tango. > Nor > do I recall meeting any people that work irregular shift hours like in the > military doing tango. You've met me. I work shift hours.
But being an IT person negates that I think. Still in the town of Canberra with a high percentage of military types and military colleges, I don't seem to have met any doing tango. This topic got me wondering why: maybe because a gregarious, can do attitude does not mix well with the of tango? Most of the tango dancers I have met are reserved and have a calmer nature. Would that be most peoples experience? > And we have at least one other shift worker (who has far more irregular shifts than I do) dancing tango in Canberra, who you also know. Possibly, but I do not know to whom you are referring as it was a long time ago now. I could count very few dancers in Canberra who came from what are called blue collar jobs. I knew one person employed in a desk job in the aviation sector in Canberra (but doing university studies in a language) who has "irregular shift hours" who finds it very difficult to make it to tango events and thus drifted in to other things too. Vince in Melbourne _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
