Do you enjoy moving to music – ballet, disco, rock, folk, country line, Latin line, ballroom, ballet, break dance…? Dances harmonize with music, and joy follows when you step out to dance your inner rhythms.
Do you experience similar inner rhythm in your work? Dance is one activity that rejuvenates your life overall and helps improve sleep and cognition at the same time it helps bust stress. And, there're dances to match the your inner rhythms...
Rhythmns and approaches differ. Unlike me, my husband loves country music, twang and all. A smooth country line dancer, he vines, stomps, pivots, hitches, struts and reggaes. His enjoyment comes from improvisation, and nothing pleases him more than to catch others unaware with an opposite spin or twist. But, there's more to this...

Country line dance, not as easy as it appears, faces four walls - and before a dance is complete you look to each one. Shift to your wall, when you should have shuffled, and you can easily lose a beat, with your feet flying out of sync.
Not all dances take equal talent. Serious upper-body strength is needed to perform a break-dance, for instance. Just try a hollow-back — a handstand in which you bend your legs toward your back, and see what I mean.
I prefer the flow of a waltz. In China recently, guides from our University faculty took Ellen Weber and me to a large square where people danced to music broadcast over loudspeakers.

Are you aware that dances of all kinds boost your mood, energy, and strength? All you need is a favorite tune and two feet that move. Your mind and body work together to help perform the rest. To dance is both a physical and cognitive challenge. In fact research shows how a dance can benefit your mind, all because dance …

2. Opens new worlds that help beat loneliness blues.
3. Helps relieve stress. Music moves your brain waves and floods your brain with serotonin, a hormone for well-being.
4. Can ward off osteoporosis, a degenerative bone disease.
5. Stirs hope to bust barriers when sickness strikes. A committed dancer can experience superhuman perseverance when cancer or a broken foot prevents participation.
For example, my husband experienced incredible restoration after a humungous tree trunk landed on his foot last winter. As a result he had four surgeries and fought infection week after week. Incredibly, when Carl slowly began to dance again, and envisioned his dance steps, his foot took a fast turn for the better. Dancing, you could say pushed Carl’s mind hard to heal his foot.
In similar ways, if work seems overwheming, consider dance as a way to establish a new inner rhythm.
May you never take one single breath for granted…Never settle for the path of least resistance…I hope you dance... I Hope You Dance by Lee Ann Womack
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