Every belly dancing instructor I've seen is overweight.
Replies
-
Just an observation.
Seriously, this seems to defy odds. If they were a sample of average population, at least 1/3 of them would be normal weight.
And, it is an active job, and they work out all the time, yet, wow!
Or have your experience been different?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UveMoL-S75Q - Some people would think Sadie has a belly...but I would kill to have her abs/body. She's considered the #1 belly dancer in the world!
I guess I don't understand the purpose of bringing attention to non-perfect bodies in anything. It all just feels like body shaming to me.0 -
Personally I'm not even going to think about complaining....0
-
It depends on where you are looking. My teacher has been dancing/teaching for 30+ years and is 66 now. She has gained weight over the years partly because of numerous injuries, havinga day job, 2 kids, etc. but despite that there are days she moves amazing and other ones not so much. I definitely agree with everyone who has said belly dancing is all inclusive for age size shape, ethnicity, etc. It is and it's wonderful. Being larger means it's easier to get my shimmies to move everything. The thing about belly-dancing is that it doesn't necessarily burn that many calories, while it works numerous muscles. I've wore my pedometer during class 1.5 hours and barely got a mile while movign the entire time.0
-
Echoing that belly dance is for celebrating the body that you have - regardless of its size or age.. It's a 3000 year old tradition passed down by the grandmothers. I don't dance just for my audience, I dance for myself and for all the women who came before me and will come after.0
-
Echoing that belly dance is for celebrating the body that you have - regardless of its size or age.. It's a 3000 year old tradition passed down by the grandmothers. I don't dance just for my audience, I dance for myself and for all the women who came before me and will come after.
0 -
Aren't they kind of required to have a high body fat percentage anyway?
Doesn't that make the belly rolling easier or something?
look up Rachel Brice no body fat there and she is a knock out, and my old instructor Barb Buchannan is awesome http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EN3IyjsDAgQ she is the one dancing here
Rachel and Mardi Love were my instructors! Mardi has some serious curves, and she works them hard. Rachel is solid as a rock, in person too. She doesn't have much to shake, but it looks so fabulous seeing all the muscles move with such control and isolation.
Belly dance just looks wonderful on most women's bodies, imho. It's so very hard, too. I love it.
Y'all watch Mardi do her thing (and she has always stayed that size). Think of the muscles it takes to do these moves:
[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fifge62L71Y[/url]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fifge62L71Y
If anyone isn't familiar with Rachel's dancing, check her out, too! It's really interesting seeing how the dances look on each body type, I think0 -
I'm overweight and I'm a pretty useful tap dancer, tapping expends a fair amount of energy.
You also see a lot of overweight people running and at the gym, go figure :P0 -
Just an observation.
Seriously, this seems to defy odds. If they were a sample of average population, at least 1/3 of them would be normal weight.
And, it is an active job, and they work out all the time, yet, wow!
Or have your experience been different?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UveMoL-S75Q - Some people would think Sadie has a belly...but I would kill to have her abs/body. She's considered the #1 belly dancer in the world!
I guess I don't understand the purpose of bringing attention to non-perfect bodies in anything. It all just feels like body shaming to me.
I the video you posted she had just given birth, here is a more updated video and the belly is gone http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qf5wMRlZYnQ0 -
NO idea what you're talking about. Any belly dancer/instructor Ive seen has never been overweight. At most they've had wider hips/been curvy.0
-
I watch some on youtube they look great to me not sure what your talking about, but then never actually been to a real class. I love dancing around my living room in my belly dancing outfit. I would never do it in public though lol0
-
I just witnessed my first marathon, and some of the runners (i'd say about 15%) were on the pudgy side. How the heck??0
-
I've seen quite a few overweight turbo kick instructors as well. I mean it's turbo kick for crying out loud! And in almost every single YouTube I have seen of all these different instructors, their form when teaching classes is way off. WAY off. And I am thinking, you have a library of very specifically performed movements, but woman you are half assing it. I dunno, there just don't seem to be genuine standards for this sort of thing I guess.0
-
Just an observation.
Seriously, this seems to defy odds. If they were a sample of average population, at least 1/3 of them would be normal weight.
And, it is an active job, and they work out all the time, yet, wow!
Or have your experience been different?0 -
Rachel and Mardi Love were my instructors! Mardi has some serious curves, and she works them hard. Rachel is solid as a rock, in person too. She doesn't have much to shake, but it looks so fabulous seeing all the muscles move with such control and isolation.
Belly dance just looks wonderful on most women's bodies, imho. It's so very hard, too. I love it.
Y'all watch Mardi do her thing (and she has always stayed that size). Think of the muscles it takes to do these moves:
[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fifge62L71Y[/url]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fifge62L71Y
If anyone isn't familiar with Rachel's dancing, check her out, too! It's really interesting seeing how the dances look on each body type, I think
Ahhh, Mardi is amaaaazingggg. So excited she's teaching at TribalCon this year! I've taken workshops with Rachel and Zoe but not her... yet...
To the original topic: we have some teachers around here who are a bit heavier. We have some that are quite slender. We have some that are in between. All of them are very talented and have some serious core strength. The dance looks different (but just as good) on all of them. Everyone has different metabolisms and diets and lifestyles. *shrugs* I've been studying bellydance for 3 years and have managed to gain weight in that time... now, I'm studying *and* practicing hard, drilling tough moves and keeping up a sweat for an hour or so multiple days a week and the weight is coming back off. Intake vs. output. I'd imagine it's the same for instructors, as they're also human beings. Simple enough!0 -
A belly dancing....
Sorry... Was hard to resist... I failed...0 -
Just an observation.
Seriously, this seems to defy odds. If they were a sample of average population, at least 1/3 of them would be normal weight.
And, it is an active job, and they work out all the time, yet, wow!
Or have your experience been different?
You did not read this thread before posting, lol.
I laughed when she first posted it, thanks for the encore.0 -
:laugh: :laugh: Your body should be your resume as it pertains to those who work in the fitness industry, Just my thoughts..0
-
Belly dance is not the fitness industry, but an art form. I want an instructor who can teach dance.
For that matter, that goes for fitness instructors as well -- I'd rather have someone who can teach than someone who just looks good.0 -
What I have observed is that the bellies of these women are not the traditional six pack that we see on a "dancer". But I don't think that they are necessarily "overweight". It is just something that we are not expecting from a dancer.... I think, anyway. But I am always "judging" them, too..... I expect my instructors to be "fit" by the standard of muscle definition. I don't want my instructor to look like me...... something to chew on....0
-
Every sport has different people of different sizes. I've had dance instructors that would be considered over- and underweight. In the world of belly dancing, a good instructor could do things with the muscles in their body that I still only dream of doing. I've been to a few belly dancing expos and seen it all. The good ones use their bodies to accentuate the dance. It's not the same as other dances where being a certain size is more preferential. Here, small movements, using all of the body's muscles is key.0
-
My belly dancing instructor is very fit and has killer abs. Some of us in the class are more heavy-set, but not her. One of the nice things about belly dancing is that it allows women to embrace their feminine side, in a body positive way. No one has ever said one mean thing to any of the ladies in my class because of her size. We all do what we can, the best that we can.0
-
in my mid-sized town the local 'professional' bellydance scene is miniscule and the amatuers (all 50 or less of them) are largely (no pun intended) bigger women, although there are some at all sizes. there are just not very many to begin with around here. population is low enough that bellydancers around here are pretty much all hobbyists, and the majority of those are heavy, but that's probably just because the majority of ppl in my area are heavy. the actual instructors i've seen around here have been anywhere from slender to somewhat fluffy. last festival (we have only a couple per year here) they brought in a couple of professionals and we got to see what ppl pay to see on cruise ships: those women had abs AND bellyfat.0
-
My Bellydance teacher has a six pack.
But so what if some of them are heavier? If it offends you find another teacher. The dance looks better if you have a little pudge anyway.0 -
Just like Zumba instructors (a lot of them( because Zumba doesn't make lean bodies duh!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.4K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions