Salsa
Simple Dip
End on a held breath. A small, safe dip to close a phrase — the move that's all trust, and the reason you stay upright while only your hands go down.
This move builds: Frame & Lead-Follow Clarity …on the always-on five — Connection, Frame, Comfort, Posture, Consent.
A video walkthrough for this move is on the way.
- Entry
- closed/embrace or open, L-to-R, facing
- Exit
- open or closed, L-to-R, facing
- Tempo
- slow
- Musical use
- break
- Connector
- No
- Level
- Advanced
- Cluster
- Position-Changes
- Style
- Both
What This Move Is
A small, controlled dip to punctuate the end of a phrase: the lead stays upright and lowers the follow a short, safe distance through the hands and frame — never a sudden drop. It's listed as advanced for one reason that has nothing to do with footwork: it is lead-follow at its most trusting, and trust is something you build with a specific partner, not a technique you spray across a floor.
Key Points
- Lead: Stay vertical — only your hands and frame travel down, so if she loses her base you can lift her straight back. Lower her resisting the fall, smooth and slow; a jerky dip is a scary dip. Telegraph it; never surprise her.
- Follow: Hold your own core and base — you support yourself, the lead only guides. Don't throw your weight back or kick; keep control so the dip is shared, not dumped.
- Timing: On a slow passage or a final hit — lower across a held beat, recover unhurried.
- Common mistake: Lead bending back or dropping her suddenly (frightening and unsafe); follow flinging her weight so the lead can't hold it. Smooth, telegraphed, mutual.
Style Notes
Safety first, always. Don't dip a partner you've never danced with, and never in a rotating class — it needs established trust both ways. A smooth dip never needs a hand on the head; if you're reaching for her head, the dip was too rough. Keep it small, keep it kind, keep it safe.
Chains into
After this, you can flow into…