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Health
"Dancing can be magical and transforming. It can breathe
new life into a tired soul; make a spirit soar; unleash
locked-away creativity; unite generations and cultures;
inspire new romances or rekindle old ones; trigger forgotten
memories."
Considered to be one of the top five physical activities,
dancing can give you a great mind-body workout. Partner
dancing was recently featured on the Top 10 Health Trends
2009, "The Doctors" show on CBS (from Jan.
7th, 2009).
It will increase and improve:
- Cardiovascular Health -- as an intense aerobic exercise,
it strengthens the heart, decreases the risk of high
blood pressure
- Stamina and Endurance
- Strengthens bones and muscles without hurting your
joints
- Flexibility
- Posture, Body Alignment, and Balance
- Brain Capacity -- from the physical exercise, there's
increased blood flow to the brain, the release of endorphins
(feel good chemicals) into the bloodstream is stimulated;
nerve cells are encouraged to grow; stress and depression
are reduced. Mental challenges (learning new sets of
skills) and kinesthetic memory (memorizing complex steps,
sequences, body postures; moving in time and staying
with the rhythm of the music) are boosted.
The aerobic nature of partner dancing stimulates
weight loss (a 150 pound adult can burn about 150
calories during 30 minutes of moderate social dancing)
and generally tones the entire body keeping you in
top shape. Many people turn to social dancing when
more traditional programs fall by the wayside, either
because of injury or sheer boredom; plus, it serves
as a wonderful stress relief.
Network
A lifetime social skill, good dancing develops
an innate personal confidence. Opportunities
continually present to meet
new people. As a popular, people magnet at social
occasions and events, the skilled and confident
dancer develops new and meaningful friendships
on and off the floor; and experiences a sense
of joy, fun, and new-found self-expression.
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