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| | #41 (permalink) | |
| The Oracle Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,144
Status: working too hard
Rep Power: 5 Rep.: 1449 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Re: Re: Re: Back on topic! Quote:
David | |
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| | #42 (permalink) |
| The Forum Legend Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Dundee, Scotland
Posts: 10,507
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 6 Rep.: 1723 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Oh. I get turned down all the time....especially by people I don't know. I think that they just look and see some fat, ugly, bald bloke. Decide that I obviously can't dance, and make some excuse (I'm sorry, I have to wash my hair). It used to bother me. It doesn't any more. I just usually go and find someone I dance with really well, and then go and dance right in front of them A friend and I often have a competition at dances. Winner being the one who gets turned down most in one night. Steve |
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| | #44 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Sydney, Australia. A _long_ way from Scotland.
Posts: 340
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 59 | Quote:
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| | #45 (permalink) | |
| The Forum Legend Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Dundee, Scotland
Posts: 10,507
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 6 Rep.: 1723 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
I tend to travel around a lot, so I do often end up at venues where I don't know a lot of people. And they don't know me. At the start of the evening at least! ![]() Steve PS. Thanks Fran. I love you too!! ![]() | |
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| | #46 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2002 Location: London
Posts: 532
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 328 ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
) woman from dancing with him! It is a very sad fact (I have found) that as a female dancer, unless you are prepared to be pushy, you will almost never get the opportunity to dance with the 'good guy dancers'. They certainly won't be asking you - they never get the chance to. As a very sad git, I normally sit in a part of the hall well away from the stage area where all the 'good' dancers congregate. I know it is pointless sitting near them - they hardly ever ask me to dance, for reasons already mentioned, and because it is even rarer for me to ask them (that's because I'm shy - honest!). Just as an example, I was at Fulham Town Hall a little while ago and had all of 2 dances over a one hour period during freestyle, and both the dances were with a beginner who probably asked me because he felt sorry for me! Occasions like that make me feel like giving up dancing - worse, in my view than being turned down for a dance. These days it is extremely rare for me to go dancing without David as then I can at least be assured of getting a few dances during the course of the evening! I enjoy dancing very much - indeed I am passionate about it. But I find it rather sad that the Ceroc dance scene, especially around London, has become so divisive & clique-y, that a lone female dancer like myself - who is polite, no ogre, doesn't smell, doesn't drip sweat & can usually follow most leads - cannot get to dance with the good guys (or, for that matter, even the better guys) for at least a couple of tracks per night. I wonder if the situation is the same in Scotland, or elsewhere? So, you guys who complain about "Refusal Row" and ladies who turn you down - just spare a thought for those of us ladies who very very very rarely get to dance with the likes of Viktor, Clayton, James, Ray, Mick, Nigel et al - because of the competition from our own sex! ![]() LilyB | |
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| | #47 (permalink) | |
| Venue Manager Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: By Edinburgh
Posts: 394
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 20 | Quote:
thankfully, I dont think it is as bad up here in Scotland Lily- (please correct me if I am wrong people up here), but I identify with you on several issues., The best time I had ( apart from Beach Boogie) when Bill and I have visited other clubs down south was at Boden this summer because it was the first time I had ever be asked to dance so often by so many men I did not know ( and they were quite fabby dancers too!! ) I really like traveling and visiting other clubs but as I am also quite shy in new company, far to self- concious about getting my lefts & rights mixed up and also simply not forward enough, I do not get asked to dance often. I realise that this can be interpreted as being aloof and arguably it could be said that it is our fault if we are not pushy enough, however if it is not in your nature you cant pretend to be somthing you are not. I am very lucky that there are some lovely dancers up here with whom I dance regulary and feel comfortable with so I can get my fix. If you guys come back up to Scotland I am sure that you will have loads and loads of dances with everyone. I think it would be safe to say that we are all pretty welcoming.fran ![]() | |
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| | #48 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Sydney, Australia. A _long_ way from Scotland.
Posts: 340
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 59 | London(?) girls sound scary Quote:
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| | #49 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Teesside
Posts: 3
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 0 Rep.: 10 | I was on holiday in Lanzarote a couple of years ago. The most unlikely man asked this absolutely dishy girl if she could jive. She was astounded as everyone else in the company that he was even asking. He got her onto the dancefloor and we all sat open mouthed whilst he "performed". They were brilliant and I thought to myself, I wish............ 2 years later i was recalling the event to someone who then told me about Ceroc. I started in Nov. 2002 and I'm loving it. I am looking forward to the time when I can shock a group of friends in the same way as the man in Lanzarote. ![]() |
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| | #50 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Wellington
Posts: 226
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 34 | Quote:
Why was he unlikely? | |
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| | #51 (permalink) |
| Omnipotent Moderator Join Date: Jan 2002 Location: Monifieth, Bonny D
Posts: 5,259
Status: Je suis en France :)
Rep Power: 10 Rep.: 1631 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | I'm glad someone else asked that question And could she? - jive that is...... And was she still astounded at his audacity when she came off the dance floor? ![]() |
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| | #53 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Teesside
Posts: 3
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 0 Rep.: 10 | Quote:
Just goes to show , You can't judge a book by its cover. | |
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| | #54 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Teesside
Posts: 3
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 0 Rep.: 10 | Quote:
It inspired me to start Ceroc and I will be happy if I ever get to be half as good as they were. What made you start Ceroc and how long have you been dancing? | |
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| | #55 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2002 Location: Fulham, London
Posts: 287
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 30 | Quote:
More than funny actually. The poors things must all be intimidated by you. Lucky for me I asked you to dance ehh ![]() | |
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| | #56 (permalink) | |
| Taxi Dancer Join Date: Sep 2002 Location: London
Posts: 283
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 10 | Quote:
Also the fact is that there are alot more good women out there than good men so these men are going to be in demand.If you ever go to Charlton, Welling or Bromley I'd love to dance with you.
__________________ It's only one dance. What's the Worst that could happen! | |
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| | #57 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2002 Location: London
Posts: 532
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 328 ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
My previous post was, of course, sent in early December and since then, things have changed a little. For one thing, I have been out dancing a lot more and have become more recognisable ie. men now know that I won't devour them and that I can dance a bit. It still hasn't made things easy though - all the good men are perpetually being monopolised by a select group of women, and unless you are prepared to barge in and actively ask for a dance, or are willing to hang around near them for ages in the hope of getting noticed, you will NOT be asked. Whilst I have been fortunate lately in getting some excellent dances with Viktor, Clayton, Nigel, Amir and James, those dances are few and far between. I also feel it is not true to say that the "good" men are so much in demand because they are outnumbered by the "good" women. It is more accurate to say that the "good" men are so much in demand because they are constantly being targetted by women, period. It is perhaps a good thing that I do not have high expectations (of being asked to dance) when I am out social dancing, otherwise I would have given up in desperation a long time ago. Or maybe the answer lies in entering competitions - that way you can at least be certain your partner for the competition will dance with you a lot more than he otherwise would have! LilyB | |
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| | #58 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: Leicester
Posts: 113
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 10 | Most times it seems to me that if you want to dance, you need to ask. No good just waiting, a lot of the time the change of partner at the end of a track happens quickly and if you're not active you won't get a dance. I guess this is more so when there are lots of ladies, but anyway I think guys like to be asked as much as girls do. |
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| | #59 (permalink) | |
| Chief Worrier Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: Edinburgh
Posts: 253
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 10 | Quote:
Lily, I have to say that you manage to make the simple act of asking men to dance sound sinister. At the end of the day whether men or women the better dancers get asked to dance. I like to think that everyone at ceroc gets to dance but if you particularly want to dance with certain individuals, then "target" ask them. You can't expect them to either say no when they are asked or the women who ask them to stop "targetting" them. ![]() | |
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| | #60 (permalink) | |
| Omnipotent Moderatrix (LMC) Join Date: May 2002 Location: Sarf East London
Posts: 1,602
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 4 Rep.: 99 | Quote:
I very rarely get asked to dance, and ocasionally I try and work out why. Is it my dancing? Is it my face? Do I have bad breath? The other thing that I have occasionally done is to spend an evening waiting to get asked before I dance. Generally the result of this is that I don't get to dance a whole lot and go home feeling vaguely miserable. My solution to this has been to take a deep breath and ASK. Actually I hate doing it, but I want to dance, so dammit I have to. There's a whole bunch of women who are going to get in there first if I don't. I can sit at the side feeling like they are in some undefinable way better than me or I can stick my neck out. I choose the latter. When I started dancing I had to have a drink before I could do it. Luckily at my regular venues I know lots of people now, so I do get to dance with my friends and asking is a lot easier. I personally think this situation is a lot to do with the fact that there are more women out there dancing than there are men. I went to Rochester the other week and couldn't get a dance for love nor money..and I was asking too. There were simply many more women than men there. My other solution has been to learn some man moves so that I can dance with my girlfriends. That way neither of us feels like a wallflower. Well, that's my rant over ... anyone fancy a dance? ![]() | |
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