Learn Belly Dancing

Learn Belly Dancing From a Teacher or With the Help of Videos
By Wendy Simons

To learn belly dancing one would need more than just text or looking at animations and still photographs as there are times when one needs to be instructed by a teacher while attending a belly dancing class.

There are a number of different moves that a belly dancer should know and one has to learn belly dancing by mastering belly rolls, backbends, forward and back shimmies, walking shimmy as well as hip bumps and squeezing glutes. Some people may also want to learn belly dancing on their own and for that they may make use of written instructions, videos as well as articles written on the subject.

Probably, when a person wishes to learn belly dancing, the mere thought of being able to perform belly rolls would be very off putting but it takes time and dedication to learn this aspect of belly dancing and, once mastered, the belly dancer would be able to do them and walk and talk at the same time even while having a sword upon their heads.

Basically, when one does a belly roll one needs to use three sets of muscles in the abdomen for control and these include the diaphragm, the pelvic muscles, and the obliques. There are various exercises that are taught to the student to help them master this aspect of belly dancing.

Backbends which are also known as Turkish folds need to be learnt and the student should learn to know which muscles to work on as well as how best to develop them. Backbends may look great but they do involve a great deal of stress to the knees and so, should not be practiced by those having knee troubles. In addition, it would help the student to learn belly dancing by taking adequate quantities of glucosamine and chondroitin as dietary supplements to ease the stress that this aspect of belly dancing entails.

Shimmying might conjure up images of the hips making an up and down motion or side to side motion and they would be right in thinking so. The forward shimmy would mean a forward to back motion, but the performer should take care that this movement should be very tiny with a delicate vibration and more accent on the backward part of the motion instead of on the forward movement to make this movement seem less obscene and in effect look more sensual and palatable to even family type audiences. The hip bump is taught to the student as being a movement of the hips from side to side that has a bit of snap and is not meant as an up and down movement.

Author Details:
Wendy Simons, copywriter for various websites including, Belly Dancing and The A to Z of.

Source: Directory of articles

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