+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 30 of 33
Like Tree31Likes

Thread: Helping students relax into their shimmies




  1. #1
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Helping students relax into their shimmies

    I have a whole crop of students at the moment who are inclined toward tight, rigid shimmies.

    I'm working with them as much as I can to slow them down & help them relax. We've tried Hadia's seated-on-the-floor legwork, Nourhan's one-legged shimmies. I've tried counting the shimmies out, starting super slow and then double-timing. I've tried mental images ("try to make your inner thighs flap in the breeze!") and imagery (letting weight & energy drop into the legs, hips are hanging from a hook, etc.)

    None of the stuff that usually works is working! I think it's partially a group dynamic... so many of them are tense that they're sort of feeding off each other's energy? Usually I have one or two students who struggle with this, but right now it's a roomful!

    I need more ideas. How do you teach students to relax and slow down? Or how did your teacher do it?


  2. #2
    Ultimate BHUZzer dunyah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Eugene, OR USA
    Posts
    6,277
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Have you tried the seated-on-the-floor legwork for a good long time, at least 5 min., followed by 5 more min. standing and shimmying?
    Belly Dance to the Music of Americanistan
    http://www.americanistan.com


  3. #3
    Mega BHUZzer kashmir's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Christchurch, New Zealand
    Posts
    2,693

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Have you tried the seated-on-the-floor legwork for a good long time, at least 5 min., followed by 5 more min. standing and shimmying?
    Would only work if you are doing leg based shimmies which I've always felt are not as relaxed any way.


  4. #4
    Established BHUZzer Emma's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Cambridge, UK
    Posts
    797

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Try making them laugh. It's hard to be tense when you're laughing, especially if you tend to carry tension in your jaw. I used to use this song when practicing shimmies (it was in an advert at the time so everyone knew it) and it never failed to crack everyone up and they did relax more.
    Suzana likes this.


  5. #5
    Ultimate BHUZzer dunyah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Eugene, OR USA
    Posts
    6,277
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by kashmir View Post
    Would only work if you are doing leg based shimmies which I've always felt are not as relaxed any way.
    Could you describe how to generate your non-leg-based shimmies? I'm curious.
    Belly Dance to the Music of Americanistan
    http://www.americanistan.com


  6. #6
    Ultimate BHUZzer ssipes's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    southern Illinois
    Posts
    5,191

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Try letting them pick their heels off the floor, like they're running in place. In fact, don't tell them it is a shimmy drill, tell them you want them to run in place with only the balls of the feet staying on the floor. Let them pump their arms as they would in running. Tell them not to worry if their upper body bounces around.

    Assuming this gets at least some of them using big loose leg movements, ask them to control the bounce and stop the arm movement while still running in place.

    When they are all doing that, tell them they are doing an Egyptian shimmy. Eventually, of course, they'll want to get their heels back down on the floor, but I've found that this method works pretty well to break people out of their tight shimmy-thats-really-a-vibration concepts.
    dunyah, bintbeled, Suzana and 4 others like this.
    Dancer/instructor/silk artist in southern Illinois sedoniaraqs@gmail.com
    Sedonia's Etsy Store


  7. #7
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Have you tried the seated-on-the-floor legwork for a good long time, at least 5 min., followed by 5 more min. standing and shimmying?
    Great minds think alike, Dunyah.. this is *exactly* what I did with them in class last night!

    I teach both the Egyptian (leg based) shimmy and more torso-involved piston shimmy. In both cases, they just grit their teeth, tense up, and gooooo for all they're worth. LOL

    It's the leg-based shimmy I really want them to master at this point though, because we're working on layering moves that work best with that shimmy.


  8. #8
    Ultimate BHUZzer Tourbeau's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    5,812

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Maybe instead of finding music that drives hard and fast, it might help to go the other direction with something slow and loping. It's pretty hard to tense up when you're listening to Bob Marley. (LOL, don't judge me. It's not my fault the local "World Music" selection didn't have anything but reggae in it when I was a beginner looking for music...and actually, I found it really useful for learning a walking shimmy because it has such a strong up-and-down bounce to it.)

    Sometimes Khaleeji music has a similar feel to it, and it shouldn't be too hard to find something that's a comfortable tempo. You might want to look through your collection and see if there's anything that would work in that genre, especially if you own any Miami records, since they lean toward danceability. There are some slower non-Khaleeji pop songs that might work, too--something like "Halo min hali" by Hisham Abbas or even the rap song "Facebooky" by Ahmed Mekky. Do you own the CD "Allem Alby" by Amro Diab? He's got a couple of Western-flavored slow jams on that record that would be easy for a student to latch onto.
    Lauren_ likes this.


  9. #9
    Ultimate BHUZzer dunyah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Eugene, OR USA
    Posts
    6,277
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by Lauren_ View Post
    Great minds think alike, Dunyah.. this is *exactly* what I did with them in class last night!

    I teach both the Egyptian (leg based) shimmy and more torso-involved piston shimmy. In both cases, they just grit their teeth, tense up, and gooooo for all they're worth. LOL

    It's the leg-based shimmy I really want them to master at this point though, because we're working on layering moves that work best with that shimmy.
    I took a shimmy layering workshop with Sedona (wonderful dancer!) and she had us do the sitting on the floor leg shimmy exercise for even longer, like 10-15 min., then stand up and do it with layering for the same amount of time. I don't know if longer would help your students, but it has sure helped my shimmy layering. She said the secret is to be both strong and relaxed. Maybe they just aren't strong enough?
    Belly Dance to the Music of Americanistan
    http://www.americanistan.com


  10. #10
    Ultimate BHUZzer ssipes's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    southern Illinois
    Posts
    5,191

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by Tourbeau View Post
    Maybe instead of finding music that drives hard and fast, it might help to go the other direction with something slow and loping.
    Or maybe a kanoun taqsim?
    dunyah and Suzana like this.
    Dancer/instructor/silk artist in southern Illinois sedoniaraqs@gmail.com
    Sedonia's Etsy Store


  11. #11
    Ultimate BHUZzer ssipes's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    southern Illinois
    Posts
    5,191

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    I took a shimmy layering workshop with Sedona (wonderful dancer!) and she had us do the sitting on the floor leg shimmy exercise for even longer, like 10-15 min., then stand up and do it with layering for the same amount of time.
    I like this exercise; my only problem is that the hip flexors are much more strongly engaged than in a standing shimmy. In fact, when I do the sitting leg shimmy exercise, my hip flexors start to really cramp up after a couple of minutes. Is there some trick to keeping them relaxed? Because of this issue, I generally only have students do this exercise about a minute at a time. I do however, tell them to do it every day.

    She said the secret is to be both strong and relaxed. Maybe they just aren't strong enough?
    Totally agree with this! And if they lack strength, there is not much to do except stress the importance of developing strength, because class drills 1x per week are not ever going to build significant strength.
    Suzana likes this.
    Dancer/instructor/silk artist in southern Illinois sedoniaraqs@gmail.com
    Sedonia's Etsy Store


  12. #12
    Established BHUZzer CFerhat's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Posts
    726

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    I sometimes have students adopt a wider stance than normal for a bit so they can feel that exaggerated looseness; also I sometimes do some very simple arm patterns as we shimmy which serves as a distraction and sneakily loosens up the lower half.


  13. #13
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by ssipes View Post
    I like this exercise; my only problem is that the hip flexors are much more strongly engaged than in a standing shimmy. In fact, when I do the sitting leg shimmy exercise, my hip flexors start to really cramp up after a couple of minutes. Is there some trick to keeping them relaxed?
    Leaning back onto the hands rather than sitting upright helps a lot, but you're right they're more engaged. I also alternate with lying on our bellies and kicking our feet as if we're swimming with swim fins on (straight knees, protect the lower back by holding the pelvis neutral and not raising the head up high). This way we get to work the upper hamstrings a bit, too, and release the hip flexors.


    Totally agree with this! And if they lack strength, there is not much to do except stress the importance of developing strength, because class drills 1x per week are not ever going to build significant strength.
    Agreed!


  14. #14
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by CFerhat View Post
    I sometimes have students adopt a wider stance than normal for a bit so they can feel that exaggerated looseness; also I sometimes do some very simple arm patterns as we shimmy which serves as a distraction and sneakily loosens up the lower half.
    Oh, this might really help them get wobbly, I'll try it next week!


  15. #15
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    LOL how funny. apparently I started a rather similar thread around this same time 5 years ago. It's showing up on 'related threads' Guess I'll read that again too and see if I missed anything the first time around!

    Helping students relaaaaax into the movements


  16. #16
    Mega BHUZzer kashmir's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Christchurch, New Zealand
    Posts
    2,693

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Could you describe how to generate your non-leg-based shimmies? I'm curious.
    It's a speeded-up hip rock contracting lateral flexors - obliques and quadratus lumborum. Yes, the knees bend - they have to - but the drivers - are in the waist. Personally, learning pre-breakdown - it was my default movement. Makes layering walking a breeze


  17. #17
    I could get used to this! SeeJaneDance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Lafayette, Louisiana, USA
    Posts
    124

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    What really helped me a lot when I was struggling to get a relaxed and loose shimmy was the realization that it's approximately the same movement you use to get a pair of well fitted jeans on. It was that lightbulb moment where I realized the extent to which my thighs were powering the motion (or the momentum of my thighs, rather). After that, I practiced a swing-y "down" emphasized hip movement with very bent knees, that eventually translated into a much more relaxed big shimmy.
    Suzana and Solissa like this.


  18. #18
    Ultimate BHUZzer dunyah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Eugene, OR USA
    Posts
    6,277
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by kashmir View Post
    It's a speeded-up hip rock contracting lateral flexors - obliques and quadratus lumborum. Yes, the knees bend - they have to - but the drivers - are in the waist. Personally, learning pre-breakdown - it was my default movement. Makes layering walking a breeze
    Interesting. I tried googling for images of those muscles, but didn't find anything with exactly those names, but I get that you are saying the waist. In all my 30+ years of belly dancing, no one has ever taught me to shimmy that way. I don't know the term "hip rock" either. You learn new things every day on this forum!
    Belly Dance to the Music of Americanistan
    http://www.americanistan.com


  19. #19
    Mega BHUZzer kashmir's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Christchurch, New Zealand
    Posts
    2,693

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Interesting. I tried googling for images of those muscles, but didn't find anything with exactly those names, but I get that you are saying the waist. In all my 30+ years of belly dancing, no one has ever taught me to shimmy that way. I don't know the term "hip rock" either. You learn new things every day on this forum!
    The QL goes from the posterior iliac crest to rib 12 & transverse processes of L1-L5. I guess not everything is online.

    I'm curious, what do you call the movement where the hip rocks on the sacrum vertically only with no sideways movement? (I have heard the term "bump" but this usually has a sideways component)


  20. #20
    Ultimate BHUZzer dunyah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Eugene, OR USA
    Posts
    6,277
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by kashmir View Post
    The QL goes from the posterior iliac crest to rib 12 & transverse processes of L1-L5. I guess not everything is online.

    I'm curious, what do you call the movement where the hip rocks on the sacrum vertically only with no sideways movement? (I have heard the term "bump" but this usually has a sideways component)
    Not sure, maybe what we call piston hips, the hips move up and down. Maybe we should start a new thread, are we hijacking?I'm interested in what you are saying, but I don't know all the names of the muscles and joints like you do.
    Belly Dance to the Music of Americanistan
    http://www.americanistan.com


  21. #21
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Not sure, maybe what we call piston hips, the hips move up and down. Maybe we should start a new thread, are we hijacking?I'm interested in what you are saying, but I don't know all the names of the muscles and joints like you do.
    Yes, she's talking about what we would call 'piston hips' and the shimmy she's talking about is what we'd usually call the piston shimmy, or Turkish shimmy, in the US.

    Though back when I started it was just called a 'shimmy' LOL the Egyptian one came later, with Raqia Hassan, I think.


  22. #22
    Established BHUZzer TediThomas's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Carbondale, Illinois (extreme southern Illinois) U.S.A.
    Posts
    783

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Have you tried having them bend over (like toe touches), relaxing the upper body so it just hangs, THEN having them shimmy? It's a little silly (and will make them feel that way a bit), but for some it can really help them relax into the shimmy.


  23. #23
    Mega BHUZzer kashmir's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Christchurch, New Zealand
    Posts
    2,693

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by TediThomas View Post
    Have you tried having them bend over (like toe touches), relaxing the upper body so it just hangs, THEN having them shimmy? It's a little silly (and will make them feel that way a bit), but for some it can really help them relax into the shimmy.
    Please do not do this. Think about what is happening - all the upper body weight is hanging off one (very important) joint. Just "hanging over" can damage discs and tear ligaments - shimmying on top of this is adding insult to injury. (For the record, flopping over, toe touching etc has been on the no-no list for over a decade)


  24. #24
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    We've definitely folded at the hip crease and shimmied. (don't worry, Kashmir, we didn't hang, just bent). Both very slowly (this is where it's easiest to catch them trying to lock their knees!) and at medium tempo.


  25. #25
    Ultimate BHUZzer Suzana's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Washington, DC, USA
    Posts
    7,043

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by Lauren_ View Post
    Yes, she's talking about what we would call 'piston hips' and the shimmy she's talking about is what we'd usually call the piston shimmy, or Turkish shimmy, in the US.
    Well, some of you would. :) To my teachers in the mid-Atlantic it was the hip shimmy, the bent-leg shimmy, the Lebanese shimmy, or occasionally the wubba-wubba.

    (And until just now I thought "piston hips" were Soheir Zaki hips aka down hips aka chonks. Live and learn.)

    Quote Originally Posted by Lauren_ View Post
    Though back when I started it was just called a 'shimmy' LOL the Egyptian one came later, with Raqia Hassan, I think.
    Yes! I can say with absolute certainty that Jillina brought that one to DC in 2003.


  26. #26
    Master BHUZzer casbahdance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Southern California
    Posts
    3,600

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by dunyah View Post
    Interesting. I tried googling for images of those muscles, but didn't find anything with exactly those names, but I get that you are saying the waist. In all my 30+ years of belly dancing, no one has ever taught me to shimmy that way. I don't know the term "hip rock" either. You learn new things every day on this forum!
    I call this one the "hip rock" or "tick tock" shimmy, too.

    I teach 3 basic shimmies: this one (the hip rock), the swivel (twisting), and the leg-driven "Egyptian." I don't teach them all in the same session; generally, I teach one type in a session, then "preview" another one at the last class as an intro to the next session.

    Deborah


  27. #27
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Lauren_'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    14,181

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    Quote Originally Posted by Suzana View Post
    Well, some of you would. :) To my teachers in the mid-Atlantic it was the hip shimmy, the bent-leg shimmy, the Lebanese shimmy, or occasionally the wubba-wubba.
    By 'we' I meant 'people who use the term 'piston hips.' I would never presume to speak for all American dancers when it comes to BD terminology... but I figured if she calls Kashmir's 'hip rock' by the name 'piston hips' then 'piston shimmy' wasn't a long shot.


  28. #28
    I could get used to this! thussell's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    167

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    In my experience it's caused by lack of leg strength. If you are open to doing some ballet exercises (please no one hate me for bringing ballet into this conversation), I find that doing 100 quick plies instantly does the trick for my students. I know it's unconventional, but it really does help.


  29. #29
    A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post. Zumarrad's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
    Posts
    12,250
    Blog Entries
    1

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    I somehow imagine that doing 100 quick plies would not make my legs instantly stronger, thought it might make them a great deal more *tired*, but that's just me.

    Especially if they were 100 quick grands plies. In fourth.
    Driving Bhuzzers away with her awfulness since 2001!


  30. #30
    I could get used to this! darkphoenix's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    69

    Re: Helping students relax into their shimmies

    I've actually found that getting the students going with a very slow shimmy that gets sped up over the course of a few minutes in conjunction with the 6 arm positions takes the students' focus away from the shimmy and gets them focusing on the arm positions (and what I'm saying, mostly silly things) instead of their lower body, which then relaxes their shimmy! If I can get them doing it without thinking about it, they unknowingly relax and begin improving.
    dunyah and taliba like this.


Similar Threads

  1. Helping students relaaaaax into the movements
    By Lauren_ in forum Belly Dance Instructor Center
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 08-03-2009, 02:31 PM
  2. Helping Students with their First Solo
    By Adishakti in forum Belly Dance Instructor Center
    Replies: 20
    Last Post: 06-14-2008, 11:33 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Statistics
  • Threads 43,366
  • Posts 633,030
  • Members 36,128
  • Welcome to our newest member, bennyreader0


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54