Excercising Guide - Does anyone have any advice?

HighT3chR3dn3ck

New Member
Hi, I've been doing ballroom for a little over a year now and I'm really into it. I was wondering if there is a weekly excercise routine that anyone could recommend that will help me to improve my dancing.

Someone recommended that I start doing Palates and/or Yoga to strenghthen my core, which made sense to me because we use our cores a lot as dancers.

Does anybody else have any other suggestions on a weekly routine?

What excercise routines would you recommend for a male?

What excercise routines would you recommend for a female?
 
welcome to Df...we have several threads that speak to this issue or very similar issues...please use our search function using the keywords such as fitness, exercise, and/or workout...again, welcome
 
My wife and I work out together twice weekly with personal trainers and we do the same things, so I don't find that there's any difference whether you're a man or lady. The key exercises for dancers relate to increasing leg strength and core/abs. Most of these are so simple they seem almost laughable -- stuff you can do anywhere without fancy machines or things, but they make a huge impact. A ball is the best piece of equipment, in our view. Here's a couple of ideas:

- Make sure you're warmed up (treadmill or bike for example, at least 5 minutes). Muscles need to be warm before a workout or they can be damaged.

- Start with some abs/core stuff, then large muscle groups, then small muscle groups, then finish with abs/core.

- Always stretch when you end your workout or the muscles can end up contracting and reducing your range of motion, which won't help your dancing.

- Try balance-related stuff, which works your core muscles and improves your balance at the same time. I love the ball for this. You can start with simple things like being in a pushup position with your feet against the ball, then roll the ball towards you by bending your knees and back again by straightening your knees. Great ab workout and helps you develop balance. Later on, as your balance improves, you can advance to kneeling on the ball (yes, both knees) while twisting side to side to work your core -- especially effective with dumbells in hand.

- One cool routine we did yesterday was to lie on the ball, at hips level, hands in pushup position and the rest of the body completely straight from head to toes, like a see-saw board. Then, while keeping the body completely straight (engaging all the core muscles), rock up and down by pushing up from your arms and alternately bending them. It feels like doing pushups but because the legs and body need to be straight you end up using all kinds of extra muscles. It's way harder than it looks. The key is not to let your head ever go behind your hands, it should always stay in front of your hands so you get the right muscles involved.

- Squats and lunges are really critical for dancers. Sure, you use your legs while dancing but standard leg exercises like these go a long way to improving your leg flexibility and strength. Proper technique is essential. When you lunge forward or back, never go ahead of your knee. Make sure you drop and rise perfectly vertical or you'll put stress on your knee instead of the muscles. This can be hard to understand without a mirror or partner to guide you, because it will feel vertical even if it isn't.
 
Proper technique is essential. When you lunge forward or back, never go ahead of your knee. Make sure you drop and rise perfectly vertical or you'll put stress on your knee instead of the muscles.

Before I started ballroom dancing, I participated in other sports, and this was a cardinal rule - "Do not allow your bent knee to go past your ankle." However, in dancing, this happens all the time. For example, in tango the knees are very forward. I've always wondered how much damage I'm doing to me knees. :(
 
look...my punishment is self-evident in that I get called fasc b/c of it...which is better than pyg, but not so great
 
Before I started ballroom dancing, I participated in other sports, and this was a cardinal rule - "Do not allow your bent knee to go past your ankle." However, in dancing, this happens all the time. For example, in tango the knees are very forward. I've always wondered how much damage I'm doing to me knees. :(

Are your knees going forward, or are you hips flexing "backward"--just like you would sit in a chair? With of course your spine verticle.
 
Are your knees going forward, or are you hips flexing "backward"--just like you would sit in a chair? With of course your spine verticle.

Hips are flexing backward, like sitting in a chair. Tango probably wasn't the best example of knees being the most forward. Perpahs samba would have been a better example :-)
 

Dance Ads

Advertise on Dance Forums Reach dancers, teachers, studios, event organizers, and dance-friendly brands. View ad options
Back
Top