Hello all,

I'm beginning to have regrets.  When I suggested that Chris copy those threads 
from the callers list, I did so because I found them inspiring accounts of ways 
that people creatively solved what might have been seen as 'bad' situations 
that had potential to damage the long-term health of our dearly loved social 
activity, and turned them into true community-building experiences, often 
making life a bit brighter for all concerned.  This seemed a great thread to 
continue on our list -- I was looking forward to learning from ways that 
organizers have done those same things - turned icky situations into better 
ones...  how organizers have taken a difficult situation at their series and 
helped improve it for the good of all concerned.

In the course of my dancing, calling and organizing life, I have witnessed many 
examples of unpleasant situations, including ones with certain dancers in the 
community.  (We can all name innumerable dancer evils, as evidenced by the 
previous posts -- including, hot-shot, self-absorbed, flirt-meister, 
black&decker twirlers, never-on-time, clumsy, unnecessarily directive...  I 
might also add limp noodles, deadweight women, carpal-tunnel-inducing 
allemanders, take up 6x your allotted spacers, stalkers, needs a shower, 
your-perfume-makes-it-hard-to-breathe, sweat factories, middleaged males who 
are borderline perverts that only dance with young girls... really, the list of 
outrages can go on and on and on...)  I have begun to believe that there is no 
way of really removing all of these "undesireable" (to some or many) people 
from our community.  It seems that when one disappears, two more appear who are 
new variations on the theme.  (And anyhow, can we really endorse that sort of 
'cleansing' to make our dance floor full of perfect dancers?  I doubt it.)  I 
have also begun to realize that I could spend countless hours railing about the 
outrages of horrible dancers, but that if I take the time to stop complaining, 
there probably are a few things that I could do to make the situation better.  
This is why I like that thread.  It was a helpful reminder of ways to take 
positive action.

I agree with those who have pointed out in other threads that it is not the job 
of the organizers (or the caller for that matter) to ensure that you or I  or 
everyone has a peak experience for every minute of the evening.  Likewise, I 
don't believe it's the job of organizers or caller to police the dance hall, to 
reprimand people for perpetuating any of the above evils, and so forth.  But 
there are certainly things we can do to make the contra world a nicer place to 
inhabit.

At the Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend earlier this month, a friend repeated an 
observation from a workshop they'd attended.  Apparently David Millstone 
reminded the group that a caller is not only a programmer, music requester, 
teacher and prompter - a caller is a leader.  A leader.  And as such, when they 
exhibit qualities of leadership, they have the capacity to bring a dance 
community to places they might not have gone on their own.  This is is what I 
noticed in the original posts about dealing with 'bad' dancers.  They were 
demonstrating leadership.

The stream of posts about 'bad' dancers has reminded me of people in my dance 
community here.  At our local dance, we have:
- a dancer who is truly "odd".  He looks like a nutty professor, has extremely 
atypical ways of interacting socially, is fairly uncoordinated, chronically 
confused, often late... and... he is utterly happy to have found contradancing. 
 
- pre-teens who partner with their same-gender friends, who for months were 
complete trainwrecks in the sets they chose, but were having a blast, wearing 
out the tracks on the dance music cds they begged their parents to buy, and 
were choosing to participate in an activity with people mostly 3-4x their age.
- people whose physical ailments simply keep them from executing certain 
figures at all, let alone correctly and on time with excellent flourishes but 
who smile broadly for the entire 3 hours.

And when I think about the larger dance community, I think of dozens and dozens 
of people who quite frankly don't fit into society's norms, but who have found 
a place in our dance community.  Do we really think we have to root out all of 
the imperfections?

At the same Ralph Page weekend in NH, during Nils Fredland's workshop, we 
considered the question "Why do we dance?"  One response that caught my 
attention was the observation that contradances are a community which is 
tolerant.  Tolerant of difference.  What a great thing.  We could use a bit 
more of that in the larger world.  Intolerance is creating quite a lot of 
damage, we could give tolerance a try.  Tolerance. 

This is partly what I noticed about those original posts.  They were examples 
of ways that a particular community tolerated an imperfect dancer, and in fact, 
made it better for all.  It wasn't endorsing a particular problematic behavior 
or attitude, but tolerating it.  They took an indirect approach -- instead of 
meeting the 'problem' head on, they figured out ways to fix the situation so 
that the 'problem' wasn't causing quite so many other problems.  They were 
making the situation itself more tolerable for all.  

I'm not talking about ignoring flat out unsafe behavior.  When a herd of 8 year 
old kids was playing tag on the dance floor, racing pell mell through the lines 
of dancers, you can bet that I wasted no time in chasing them down to tell 
them, "Uh-uh.  No way.  You need to stop.  This is a dance.  If you want to 
play tag, talk to your parents about going outdoors.  But this is a place to 
dance, to enjoy the music and to sit and talk with friends."  

When I see certain young and enthusiastic young men out there who I think are 
endangering the arm sockets of less strong-willed partners than I, it occurs to 
me that I have a few options.  I could tell them they're not welcome at my 
dance, I could sternly lecture them about how they will cause countless women 
pain and suffering and rotator cuff surgery, or I could make sure that I, and 
others like me, cheerfully ask them to dance at least once in a night, knowing 
that I have the dance skills to protect myself and with the hope that I can 
help them see the delights of mutuality and consideration in a dance partner.  

My impulse is to lecture, and to avoid them like the plague on the dance floor, 
but I suspect that's not what will make the situation more tolerable for all.  
(And besides, it's partly because I'm a strong-willed partner that I feel 
endangered -- I resist their lead rather than going with the flow.)

Sigh.

Anyone teach ethics?  This is like questions of morality.  Greatest good for 
the greatest number?  Absolute moral code?  Shades of grey?

Yours with furrowed brow,
Chrissy Fowler
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.belfastflyingshoes.org 



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