Hello Lois:

I learned from the grand days of Tango L to avoid "right" and "wrong" so I 
won't use those words.

 

I understand putting the heels on the floor without weight but keeping the 
weight on the ball of the foot. It doesn't make any sense to put weight on the 
heels. The heel on the floor acts like a parking brake that will block the 
woman from pivoting. Also, if the weight is on the heel, the woman will fall 
backward into the next step. 

 

I dance close embrace and Apilado style. I dance on the balls of my feet so my 
torso is slightly forward so I can make contact with the woman’s chest. I’m 
going to have difficulty leading her if her weight is back on her heels because 
she can’t present her chest. The follower can take longer steps if she is on 
the ball of the foot instead of the heel. (Short steps lead to big problems.)

 

Do teachers contradict other teachers? Since there seems to be multiple ways of 
dancing tango, they express the style that works best for them. I can’t dance 
flat footed or have weight on my heel. Maybe some teachers can dance that way, 
but I can’t.

 

Is this really a preference issue instead of a “right vs. wrong” issue. My 
advice is stay with the technique that works best for you. Everybody isn’t 
compatible with everybody else on the dance floor. I’m sticking with my style 
even if some teachers say it’s wrong. That’s OK. They can dance with somebody 
else. When no one will dance with me, I’ll change my technique.

 

P.S. Lois, the Minneapolis Visitors Center sent tourist info in case I stop at 
MSP on my return from Portland, OR tango fest in October.

 

Michael

Came home to New York where the Argentine Tango is better

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Lois Donnay
Sent: Sunday, April 26, 2015 10:53 PM



"Help!  A tango teacher told me to keep my heels on the floor - I should use 
the heels on my tango shoes to stand on. I've been working hard to do that, 
even though it didn't feel very natural. Now another teacher (ed not

- that was me) says I should keep my heels just slightly off the floor - only 
if I really need balance should they touch the floor. What is right?? And why 
do teachers seem to contradict each other so often?"

 

Ever heard of that - a teacher who tells followers to keep their heels on the 
floor "your shoes have heels for a reason!"

Lois

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