Terre Pruitt's Blog

In the realm of health, wellness, fitness, and the like, or whatever inspires me.

  • I teach yoga, Nia, and stretch online!

    ALL CLASSES ARE ON ZOOM AT 10:00 AM PDT

    Tuesday Gentle Yoga 

    Wednesday Nia

    Thursday Stretch

    Please see my website for details!

    I am also available for private Nia / yoga / Personal Training all virtual, of course!

  • Unknown's avatar

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • My Bloggey Past

  • ******

    Chose a month above to visit archives, or click below to visit a page.

Archive for July, 2012

Anything Goes Is The Tagline For The First Stage Of FreeDance

Posted by terrepruitt on July 5, 2012

Nia is both a dance exercise and a life practice.  Kind of like yoga.  You can go to a class and get the exercise you want and have it end there or you can learn about its principles and take them into your life.  There are levels of the practice.  Nia has chosen to use a “belt” system as their levels.  Instead of just having numbers or names, they have assigned belt colors to the levels.  There are five levels; White Belt, Green Belt, Blue Belt, Brown Belt, and Black Belt.  The intensives to gain the belts can be taken and enjoyed by people who aren’t teaching. Each belt has 13 principles, except Green. Green does not have its own set of principles because green is the belt level that is actually designed specifically for teachers and helps them hone their teaching skills.  It delves into the 13 principles of the White Belt.  The White Belt’s principle #4 is FreeDance.  FreeDance as a practice has eight stages.  I have posted about eight through two.  This post is about stage one.  Stage #1 of Nia’s 4th White Belt Principle is Freedance – Anything Goes (movement wise).

While you are dancing any movement is great if it is authentic movement.  With Nia there is choreographed moves, but within the patterns of movement there is the ability to freedance.  Also with many routines there is sometimes just freedance where we are allowed to dance free to the music without any choreography.  Stage one:  Freedance, anything goes, allows us the greatest of freedoms.  You can dance using the wall, the mirror, a chair, the floor, or a ballet barre that might be in the room.  You can dance fast, slow, high, low, or in the middle.  Anything that you sense your body wants to do to the music.  It is up to you.

The idea with freedance is to just let the body go.  Don’t think about it.  When you think about it often comes the judgment.  Sometimes the judgment can interfere with movement, especially if it is judgment along the lines of, “Oh I must look silly doing this.”  “Oh that probably isn’t pretty.”  “Oh, I am not graceful enough to spin.”  “Oh, I need to do this or that.”  This is all inner dialog that clogs up the muscles and their movements.

Freedance also, as I believe I’ve mentioned before, in not club dancing.  We are NOT just bouncing or undulating to the beat, we are moving to the music.  We are moving our bodies towards as pleasurable sensation of health and well being.

Freedance is also not patterned dancing, we save the patterns for our choreographed movements.  Freedance is just free.  It is spinning twirling, diving and whirling.  It could be hopping or dropping.  It really is whatever your body does.

Freedance is not easy.  It takes practice.  It is not easy to just be on the floor and not think about how you are going to move and just let your body go.  It is a challenge.  But once you can stop thinking and talking in your head you will find yourself moving to the music.  Sometimes you might even notice that you are moving in a way that you didn’t think about and it is really amazing to have that sensation.  But don’t think too much, just keep moving.

I would like to invite and encourage you to make some space in your home or if you are so inclined find a space to dance outside . . . find a space turn on some music and just dance.  Let yourself go.  Let yourself be free.  Allow the time, space, frame of mind and spirit to freedance.  Remember, anything goes!

Wahoo!  I have to add that in the middle of typing this up I secured another class to sub for the City of San Jose.  So exciting to be able to share Nia through the city!  Yay!

Posted in FreeDance, Nia | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Nia Really Is For EveryBODY

Posted by terrepruitt on July 3, 2012

I often get e-mails and phone calls from people who say they have injured themselves and they ask if they can do Nia.  Well, I am not a doctor and I don’t know the extent of their injuries, but I explain to them one of the core philosophies (if you will) of Nia.  You do what YOUR body can do.  EveryBODY is different.  EveryBODY has something going on in their body and something going on in their life.  EveryBODY will be different every day.  So we encourage everyBODY to do what they can.  Of course, depending upon the injury, people should check with their physician and be cleared for aerobic activity and movement and when they get to class how much they do is up to them.

It is important to remember that each individual is responsible for his/her own body.  When someone has had a recent injury it is very important to remember to be their own Conscious Personal Trainer (CPT).   It is up to you to move in a way that is healthful.  You are the one that knows the extent of the injury and you are the one that has worked with a medical professional to be healed.  So here is where you really get to be aware of your body and do only what it can do.

I’ve also posted before about the levels of intensity.   In Nia we say that there are three levels of intensity and Nia teachers demonstrate three levels, but really there are many, many, many levels due to the fact that everyBODY is different.  My level one (which is deemed the lowest level of intensity) might be someone else’s level two.  My level three could be someone else’s level two AND in addition to that, it could change the very next day!  EveryBODY has different levels of intensity.  I might take BIG steps to the side, whereas the person right behind me might take little steps, and the person next to her medium steps, and the person behind him HUGE steps.  We all move in our own way.  It is up to each individual participant to do what works for them at that time.  If there is an injury involved maybe the level that used to be intensity level one, has now changed to level three intensity.  It could take some time for the body to adjust and heal and get back to its original levels of intensity.

Nia believes you do what your body can and by doing what you can you will feel good.  And when you feel good you will realize that you can do a lot.  So the next time you do it you might do more, then the next time more, then the next time—might be a rough day, you might do less—and Nia rejoices in that.  It is important to do what you can at the moment you are doing it.

I always encourage Nia participants in my classes to play with different levels.  I also encourage them to try new things, to not always do the same move they are comfortable with.  This could be something that one is required to do if they have injured a body part.  Any injury sometimes can be a chance to grow in other areas.  It doesn’t have to be a stopping point.  So I encourage people to keep moving – if they can – so, yes, people can do Nia if they have been injured.  As long as they have been cleared to do so by a doctor.  If they are fit to move Nia can easily be adapted to help them move in their new state and get them back to dancing with joy.

Posted in Nia | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »