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         DANCE
        PARTNERS 
         DANCING
        IS THE EXPRESSION OF MY LIFE
        
 This
        ain't my whole life story, but this should be a fair condensation of
        that special aspect of my life devoted to the art and craft of dancing.  
        Some
        36 years ago..... 
        ...Mom enrolled me almost
        simultaneously in piano classes and ballet school. Piano class was the
        first of a series of activities meant to introduce me to a
        "cultured lady's upbringing", (which I had hoped wouldn't stop
        me from climbing trees and neighbors' roofs, playing cops and robbers
        with my 4 brothers, and being captain of the soccer team.) I guess Mom
        realized I should stop thinking I was a boy and learn to be a lady.  
             But
        ballet class was also meant to develop my lung power. You see, I
        suffered from wracking asthma attacks since I was 6 years old, making
        even sleeping a chore. Mom had discovered the perfect solution for me.
        Ballet was a great physical activity which would help me gain confidence
        and poise while strengthening those lung muscles.  
             So
        for 12 years, I spent most of my after-school hours in one dance school,
        first as a ballet student, then as an assistant ballet teacher, and
        later as a regular teacher and troupe performer of the Filipinescas
        Dance Company. Since the Company was mainly a folkdance troupe, I was a
        special performer for ballet and  flamenco, and a support for folk
        dancing, earning a huge sum for a high school student.  
        Quite
        a long respite 
        Political activism and then
        marriage intervened in college, both of which took me away from my
        dancing for the next twenty years. Not much harm done, since I had not
        clearly planned a career in dance anyway.  
             Public
        relations is my profession, and just as anything I put my mind into, I
        tried to learn everything I could and excel in it. I still handle major
        PR accounts, am involved in social development and community programs
        (health, women, poverty-alleviation, child education), and am very deep
        into spirituality and computer technology. All very serious stuff
        indeed. Dancing is the fun and hobby side of me. No, that's not exactly
        right. Dancing is what makes me alive, just as painting makes a painter
        alive. It's his expression of life.  
        I'm
        back in my milieu 
          
        Five years ago, my mom introduced
        me to ballroom dancing, and I've been hooked since. The first time I
        stepped onto the ballroom floor with my dance instructor, images of my
        youth flashed before me. Gradually, I remembered and relearned
        principles from ballet school, and dance steps from many earlier social
        dance sessions with my Mom and Dad. Thus it wasn't that difficult to
        relearn the basics of Tango, Chachacha, Boogie, Twist, and Swing. I
        could remember bits of the Charleston, Charanga and Pachanga, Jitterbug,
        and a dozen or so of the hundreds of the 60s dances. The Latin dances
        which I love are comparatively new dances for me.  
             Ssh....
        I wouldn't even dare discuss this with my friends. But barely a year on
        the floor, friends were quietly cheering me on, other amateur dancers
        trying to copy my moves. I was the 'star' of the ballroom, with my fluid
        moves, gracefully controlled arms and perfect turns. The dance
        instructors (D.I.s) vied to dance with me. I tried several but chose to
        continue regularly only with the better ones.  
        Accepting
        a Challenge 
        After another year, when friends,
        new acquaintances and dance instructors would approach me to teach them
        the moves, I decided to take a challenge and organized the Heritage
        Dance Center.  
             Indeed
        it is a challenge! Something was, and still is, sorely missing in
        Philippine ballroom -- professional training. I wasn't about to fill the
        gap, but I knew I had enough background training and support resources
        to create an edge.  
             In early 1997, I set up the Heritage
        Dance Center, with my regular dance partner then as an associate.
        Together we formulated a limited dance curriculum meant for
        beginner dancers and aspiring dance instructors, based on the principle
        that anyone can learn to dance and create for their own enjoyment. 
             I visited local dance schools, only to
        find out that their ballroom instructors barely had any dance training
        (the most was one year). I purchased and vociferously read dance and
        human kinetics books. I visited Ms. Skippy Blair during my visit to the
        U.S. and continue to learn from her. I made friends with several balikbayan
        ballroom dancers, others from the Web, sought out data-filled websites,
        contacted other dancers worldwide, all the while testing out new and
        rediscovered theories and ideas, patterns, syncopations and
        amalgamations with the few willing partners. The persistent inquiry,
        research and testing continues.  
        Uncontrollable
        Urge to Share 
        Somehow, dancing hasn't made me
        rich financially (really wish it did), but my brain is ever full. To
        make room for more, I have to send the processed information off
        somewhere.  
             I
        completed my book "Secrets of Modern Ballroom Dancing"
        (summarized online as Victoria's Dance Secrets) which includes many of
        the principles I've rediscovered and now share with my students.  I
        wrote  weekly columns on dancing in Isyu opinion paper and
        contributed stories and essays to the Ballroom Dancing Philippines
        Magazine. 
             This website  acts as a diary for
        my own experiences on the social ballroom floor, and
        is mainly another outlet for excess energies and desire to share the
        knowledge I've gained from countless friends, fellow dancers and
        strangers. I'm still into dance teaching this year but only part of the
        time. My partner, Rene Canlas, handles most of the classes, since I
        decided to produce an interactive CD on dance. Besides I want to
        concentrate on programs through which we can continue to share our gifts
        with groups of children, senior citizens and P.E. teachers instead. What
        better and faster way is there to duplicate the sharing with others?  
        On partners
        Rene and Vikky: So far, we're the best match!
         "Great dancers are
        not great because of 
        their technique; they're great because 
        of their passion." - Martha Graham  | 
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