Anonymous wrote:Send her over to my house and my kid will teach her to do the Floss.
Anonymous wrote:I studied dance for years as a kid. But I was in high school before I was comfortable dancing at a school dance. Dancing at a dance requires self-confidence, comfort with your body, and a sense of connection to the music. It doesn't even require that much of a sense of rhythm, as long as you don't care how well you dance. I know plenty of people with no sense of rhythm who still dance at parties and clubs, because they enjoy themselves, and don't care about or even think about, how their dancing looks to other people.
If your daughter was comfortable doing martial arts moves, the issue is probably more one of familiarity, and feeling connected to music. so play more music around the house, dance around the house with her. Normalize it. Don't send her off to classes to try and fix her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old showed recently she had no idea what to do at a dance by standing around watching and finally doing aikido moves instead of dancing! I tried to advise but I'm not much of a dancer so I have no idea how to really help her. Is there a dance class anyone could recommend that would be helpful for this situation? Would like her to feel at least moderately comfortable at future dances! Thanks.
Why do you feel you need to advise, OP? There will be some things that your daughter doesn't know how to do, or situations that will make her nervous, and that's okay. Take a deep breath and step back--she'll figure it out. That is better than mom/dad swooping in and protecting from every sling and arrow.
I say this as a mom of a slightly younger daughter who sometimes needs to remind myself of this. We don't have to solve every minor inconvenience; they need to build grit and figure things out for themselves. The kids will be alright!
Dancing is an actual skill. Kids have to be taught in order to know how to dance. They can be taught by their parents or friends. Or they can learn by taking classes. No one is magically born with the ability to dance ballet or hip hop.
If OP's daughter wants to learn how to dance, it's not helicoptering to enroll her in a couple classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old showed recently she had no idea what to do at a dance by standing around watching and finally doing aikido moves instead of dancing! I tried to advise but I'm not much of a dancer so I have no idea how to really help her. Is there a dance class anyone could recommend that would be helpful for this situation? Would like her to feel at least moderately comfortable at future dances! Thanks.
Why do you feel you need to advise, OP? There will be some things that your daughter doesn't know how to do, or situations that will make her nervous, and that's okay. Take a deep breath and step back--she'll figure it out. That is better than mom/dad swooping in and protecting from every sling and arrow.
I say this as a mom of a slightly younger daughter who sometimes needs to remind myself of this. We don't have to solve every minor inconvenience; they need to build grit and figure things out for themselves. The kids will be alright!
Dancing is an actual skill. Kids have to be taught in order to know how to dance. They can be taught by their parents or friends. Or they can learn by taking classes. No one is magically born with the ability to dance ballet or hip hop.
If OP's daughter wants to learn how to dance, it's not helicoptering to enroll her in a couple classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old showed recently she had no idea what to do at a dance by standing around watching and finally doing aikido moves instead of dancing! I tried to advise but I'm not much of a dancer so I have no idea how to really help her. Is there a dance class anyone could recommend that would be helpful for this situation? Would like her to feel at least moderately comfortable at future dances! Thanks.
Why do you feel you need to advise, OP? There will be some things that your daughter doesn't know how to do, or situations that will make her nervous, and that's okay. Take a deep breath and step back--she'll figure it out. That is better than mom/dad swooping in and protecting from every sling and arrow.
I say this as a mom of a slightly younger daughter who sometimes needs to remind myself of this. We don't have to solve every minor inconvenience; they need to build grit and figure things out for themselves. The kids will be alright!
Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old showed recently she had no idea what to do at a dance by standing around watching and finally doing aikido moves instead of dancing! I tried to advise but I'm not much of a dancer so I have no idea how to really help her. Is there a dance class anyone could recommend that would be helpful for this situation? Would like her to feel at least moderately comfortable at future dances! Thanks.