• WebMD Review Of Square Dancing (1)

    From Daryl Stout@954:895/7 to All on Monday, March 07, 2022 04:33:44
    WebMD - Don't Be a Square -- Dance!

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    Don't Be a Square -- Dance!

    Regardless of your age, square dancing is good for the body and the mind.
    Plus, it's a great way to meet a 'partner'.

    By Denise Mann, WebMD Medical News

    July 9, 2001 -- "Bow to your partner, bow to your corner, circle left,
    alemand left ... swing and promenade home."

    In squares of eight across the country, Americans from senior-citizen age
    on down are linking arms, sashaying, and do-si-doing themselves to longer, healthier, and happier lives. They're having a blast and also lowering their risk of heart disease, diabetes, certain types of cancer, age-related memory loss, osteoporosis, and depression.

    Good for Body and Mind

    With all its moving, twisting, and turning, square dancing provides more
    than the daily dose of heart- and bone-healthy physical activity.
    Remembering all the calls -- from 'do-si-do' to 'alemand' -- keeps the
    mind sharp, potentially staving off age-related memory loss, experts say.
    And the companionship that regular square dancing offers is an antidote
    to depression and loneliness, a statement confirmed by square-dancing
    advocates everywhere.

    Take Larry McKinley, a 62-year-old who has been square dancing for 30-plus years with his wife, Sue -- who, incidentally, he met at a square dance.
    "We do it as often as we can, maybe five or six times a week," he tells
    WebMD.

    "The listening -- and executing the commands -- takes deep concentration.
    The twisting and turning are not too hard on you, but give your body the exercise that it needs," he says.

    McKinley's club, the London Bridge Square Dance Club of Lake Havasu, Ariz.,
    has 80 members, and the average age of a member is 75.

    "We recently graduated an 84-year-old," he says. "Graduated," in
    square-dancing terms, means the student has earned a Mainstream dance
    level.

    There are four levels of square dancing, McKinley tells WebMD. There's Mainstream, then there's Plus, followed by the more professional, exhibition-levels, A-1 and A-2. McKinley is a Plus-level square dancer.

    "It's very easy once you learn," he says. "Years ago, I was getting a
    divorce and didn't want to be a bump on a barstool." That's when he went
    to his first dance and got hooked.

    "It's just so much fun. Square dancing is setting friendship to music,"
    he says. "It's having a place to get up and go in the evening where you
    can work up a good tired and a good sweat."
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (954:895/7)
  • From Daryl Stout@954:895/7 to All on Tuesday, June 07, 2022 00:08:06
    WebMD - Don't Be a Square -- Dance!

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Don't Be a Square -- Dance!

    Regardless of your age, square dancing is good for the body and the mind.
    Plus, it's a great way to meet a 'partner'.

    By Denise Mann, WebMD Medical News

    July 9, 2001 -- "Bow to your partner, bow to your corner, circle left,
    alemand left ... swing and promenade home."

    In squares of eight across the country, Americans from senior-citizen age
    on down are linking arms, sashaying, and do-si-doing themselves to longer, healthier, and happier lives. They're having a blast and also lowering their risk of heart disease, diabetes, certain types of cancer, age-related memory loss, osteoporosis, and depression.

    Good for Body and Mind

    With all its moving, twisting, and turning, square dancing provides more
    than the daily dose of heart- and bone-healthy physical activity.
    Remembering all the calls -- from 'do-si-do' to 'alemand' -- keeps the
    mind sharp, potentially staving off age-related memory loss, experts say.
    And the companionship that regular square dancing offers is an antidote
    to depression and loneliness, a statement confirmed by square-dancing
    advocates everywhere.

    Take Larry McKinley, a 62-year-old who has been square dancing for 30-plus years with his wife, Sue -- who, incidentally, he met at a square dance.
    "We do it as often as we can, maybe five or six times a week," he tells
    WebMD.

    "The listening -- and executing the commands -- takes deep concentration.
    The twisting and turning are not too hard on you, but give your body the exercise that it needs," he says.

    McKinley's club, the London Bridge Square Dance Club of Lake Havasu, Ariz.,
    has 80 members, and the average age of a member is 75.

    "We recently graduated an 84-year-old," he says. "Graduated," in
    square-dancing terms, means the student has earned a Mainstream dance
    level.

    There are four levels of square dancing, McKinley tells WebMD. There's Mainstream, then there's Plus, followed by the more professional, exhibition-levels, A-1 and A-2. McKinley is a Plus-level square dancer.

    "It's very easy once you learn," he says. "Years ago, I was getting a
    divorce and didn't want to be a bump on a barstool." That's when he went
    to his first dance and got hooked.

    "It's just so much fun. Square dancing is setting friendship to music,"
    he says. "It's having a place to get up and go in the evening where you
    can work up a good tired and a good sweat."
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (954:895/7)