I've been hanging out with an ensemble of African guys from various countries in Africa who are entertainers and shamelessly feeding off of their positive outlook on things. A short video that really resonated with me and spawned me to seek out people of this nature was the one by Alan Watts called 'Music and Life'.
It reminded me that life is not an end sum game but one where one was must continue to participate and enjoy it as a whole. It teaches us that life is not necessarily a journey of destination but the events that happen throughout that journey add to the entire meaning of life. They enjoy dancing and often target joints where music is playing so they can begin to break out their moves. I've never been an innovative dancer having come from the UK and not being a dancer. My execution of moves are mainly lunges and twists of the upper body with deep scowls to discourage critics from offering constructive input.
They do say dancing is an action that can be learnt with practise just like anything else and it's not limited to race at all. It's a creative expression of self, an art form, just like rapping in hip hop and not everyone has to sound the same to be good. It does require a certain level of rhythm, a movement in time with the beat in order to convey symmetry and help assuage the introduction of this individual expression from the dancer. When one has truly refined their voice in dance, they can branch out and start moving off rhythm as need be and let their body respond in whatever fashion that they want.
They do say dancing is an action that can be learnt with practise just like anything else and it's not limited to race at all. It's a creative expression of self, an art form, just like rapping in hip hop and not everyone has to sound the same to be good. It does require a certain level of rhythm, a movement in time with the beat in order to convey symmetry and help assuage the introduction of this individual expression from the dancer. When one has truly refined their voice in dance, they can branch out and start moving off rhythm as need be and let their body respond in whatever fashion that they want.
That being said, a big part of game is dance. In the courting process, how one moves to the music is a suggestion, a promissory action signalling how well you will poke the lizard's brains out. Mating is an act of nature but in order to ensure that it's not done 'when one has the time', it has been configured that it is actually an act of enjoyment so that humans are driven to complete this act especially during the ages of when they are more fertile and virile. Dancing is an additional supplementation to this natural drive and the better one dances in combination with how they look physically, in shape and proportionate, the more likely that a lizard will single him out for mating purposes almost exclusively. Dancing involving with hip movements mimicking sexual copulation can practically accelerate the attraction process and urge the participants or interested watchers into taking affirmative action.
I've been watching and trying and I represented well when being the only guy of West African strain in a party playing a music strongly influenced by the Portuguese and having developed in a South African country, I decided to change the music. When it came on, I started rotating my hips naturally and breaking out dance moves to the applause of lizards. Dancing with the main lizard there and thrusting into her buttock areas in cadence with the rhythm signalled my prowess and that was a win situation there. I really had no interest in chasing her any further from that point as I had tried before and she had gently blown me out. In this quarter of my life, I am in an area where I have an upper hand so the lizards will eventually come back. With options and auxiliary reptiles coming into play, vying for starter positions, I can actually sit back and wait.
I've been watching and trying and I represented well when being the only guy of West African strain in a party playing a music strongly influenced by the Portuguese and having developed in a South African country, I decided to change the music. When it came on, I started rotating my hips naturally and breaking out dance moves to the applause of lizards. Dancing with the main lizard there and thrusting into her buttock areas in cadence with the rhythm signalled my prowess and that was a win situation there. I really had no interest in chasing her any further from that point as I had tried before and she had gently blown me out. In this quarter of my life, I am in an area where I have an upper hand so the lizards will eventually come back. With options and auxiliary reptiles coming into play, vying for starter positions, I can actually sit back and wait.