Perfect frame leader
I would like to know which of these points are the most important for a good follower experience amd if there is something wrong ( llm can give wrong responses)
For a good follower experience in kizomba, a stable “frame” should not be stiff: it should be clear, calm, and continuous. The follower should feel: “He knows where he is going, he is not pulling me, he is not crushing me, he is not changing his mind at the last second.”
- Frame = stable torso, soft arms
The main lead should not come from the hands or shoulders, but from the center of the body: chest, back, hips, and weight.
Think of it like this:
hands = contact
arms = transmission
torso = lead
feet = decision
If you move your shoulders and arms before your body, the follower feels noise. If you first transfer your weight and then let the body communicate, she feels clarity.
- Keep the shoulder blades “settled,” not the shoulders high
A very useful trick: imagine your shoulder blades are light but “resting in your back pockets.”
You do not need to squeeze them too much. You only need to avoid:
shoulders rising;
elbows collapsing;
right arm pushing;
left hand pulling.
The right feeling is: open chest, long neck, low shoulders, alive back.
- Do not seek contact: create a structure where she can relax
Im “holding more,” but from giving a reliable lead. If the follower feels instability, she protects herself and reduces contact.
So the frame should say:
“You can trust the signal, but I am not invading your space.”
In practice: constant contact, minimal pressure, no sudden changes.
- Lead from weight, not from the step
Before taking a step, feel:
Where is my weight?
Can she understand that I am changing weight?
Is my torso announcing the movement?
Many leaders step with the feet, but the upper body arrives later. The follower then feels delay and confusion.
Exercise: do a slow basic step without music. First shift your weight, then let the foot move. The torso should remain calm, without swinging.
- Soft knees, but vertical axis
In kizomba you should not be rigid like in tango, but you should not be “loose” either. A common mistake is bending the knees too much and losing height on every step.
Think:
head suspended upward
elastic knees
feet rooted into the floor
If your level goes up and down, the follower feels instability. If your axis stays calm, she trusts you.
- Reduce shoulder movement
Do not “mark” the rhythm with shoulderwor to compensate for uncertainty.
Trick: dance one song thinking that your shoulders are “silent.” The movement should travel from:
floor → feet → knees → hips/center → torso
Not from:
music → shoulders → arms → follower
- The right arm should not trap her
In closed hold, the right arm should create a frame, not a cage.
The follower should be able to breathe. If you want more connection, do not increase the strength of the arm: increase the clarity of the center.
Good sign: she can follow without feeling dragged.
Bad sign: you need to “correct” her with your hand or arm.
- Fewer figures, more quality
For follower experience, a simple basic step with a stable frame is better than many confusing variations.
In social dancing, try this rule:
70% basic steps and clean walks
20% simple musicality
10% figures
Followers often appreciate a calm, musical, readable leader more than a complicated but unstable one.
- Micro-pause before changing direction
When you change direction, do not do it like a snap. Give a small piece of information first.
It is not a visible pause. It is a small “pre-signal” in the body: you slow down, collect the weight, then change.
This makes the lead much more pleasant.
- Practical test: dance with “30% frame”
Many leaders use too much energy. Try dancing with only 30% of the strength you would normally use.
If the follower can still follow you, it means your frame is clear. If she cannot, you were probably compensating with force instead of structure.
Simple mental formula
During the dance, repeat mentally:
low — stable — soft — clear
low: weight into the floor;
stable: calm axis;
soft: no stiff arms;
clear: intention before movement.
The best frame in kizomba is the one the follower almost does not notice: she only feels that dancing with you is easy.