It's All Relative
Why do alignment corrections still fall flat even when dancers are trying their hardest? This episode uncovers what teachers are missing when cueing alignment in dance training. In this episode of It’s All Relative, Cara Dixon dives deep into one of the biggest struggles in dance education and dance technique training: why dancers continue to miss alignment corrections even after hearing them repeatedly. From “engage your core” to “lift up” and “square your hips,” Cara explains why broad corrections often create frustration instead of transformation. This episode breaks down how alignment in dance is not just a shape, but a full coordination system involving stabilization, muscular initiation, weight transfer, and body awareness. Cara shares how visual anatomy, directional cueing, and movement coordination can dramatically improve dancer understanding, retention, and technical consistency. Whether you’re a dance teacher, studio owner, or competitive dancer, this episode will change the way you approach dance corrections and alignment training. Cara talked about: * Why generic dance corrections create generic dance training results * How dancers interpret alignment cues differently without visual and anatomical understanding * Why alignment is a coordination system, not just a final shape or position * The role of muscular coordination, stabilization, and weight transfer in strong dance technique * How visual learning and anatomy-based dance training improve correction retention and dancer confidence 3 Key Takeaways from Cara: 1. Replace broad dance corrections with specific, directional language that helps dancers truly feel the movement 2. Ask dancers to identify their own compensations so they build stronger body awareness and technical understanding 3. Use visual references whenever possible to help dancers connect corrections to their own body and movement patterns This episode is a reminder that dancers cannot apply corrections they do not fully understand. When teachers shift from broad cues to visual, anatomical, and coordination-based training, dancers gain clarity, confidence, and consistency in their technique. Strong alignment is not about forcing a shape, it’s about creating coordinated movement patterns that dancers can repeat with control, awareness, and strength. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]
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