> On Sep 30, 2019, at 5:09 PM, Bill Baritompa via Callers 
> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> 
> Hi Becky, John and all, 
> 
>      I think it is slightly more complex. 
> Have a look at the young dancer here
> https://youtu.be/sFVToeQdCPY?t=385
> She does not look awkward and the flow is good. 
> 
> ...

I still think that turning over the right shoulder would be easier.

I've sometimes tried teaching the direction of a Petronella spin by having 
dancers start out facing the center of their circle, then having them turn 
their heads to look at the person on their right (or the spot they'll be moving 
into), and finally telling them to keep turning their heads further the same 
way and let their bodies follow along as they spin into the new spot.  Some 
people still spin over their left shoulder.

It seems to me that people can get into a mental state where they've discovered 
one way to do the figure and aren't able--or aren't willing or aren't 
ready--even to imagine the idea of traveling the _same_ direction along the 
floor as they just did but spinning around their own body axis in the 
_opposite_ direction from what they just did.  It's just outside the universe 
of possibilities under consideration.

People sometimes dance a Rory-O'More-type slide/spin by spinning in what I 
consider the "hard" direction.   But I think it's pretty darned rare for 
someone to spin ccw on the "slide right" and cw on the slide left and a good 
bit more common for someone to spin the same direction for the"slide left" as 
for the "slide right."  To me that supports the idea that it's more common for 
people simply not to consider one possible direction of spin than for people to 
make a deliberate choice of spinning opposite to the usual (easier, IMO) 
direction.

--Jim

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