So Angela did a great post about her favorite non-obvious pole-cessories.
Which made me think: I should do a post of my favorite TOTALLY OBVIOUS pole things!
Because why the hell not. In pictures, here’s some pole stuff I like a lot (and one thing I’m not crazy about):
1. Grip
Especially because my pole is the slipperiest thing ever (seriously, I’m starting to think they coat them in Astroglide at the X-Pole manufacturing plant), I could not live with out this stuff.
I would drink this stuff if I thought it would help.
sticky knees, courtesy of my lover, DRY HANDS.
2. Shoes
Okay, I have a love hate relationship with these, as I am forced to teach my choreo classes in them.
I hate heels, but goddamn do they look good. (You’ll notice that the gallery has a ration of 15 to one pics of me in heels).
Weirdly, insanely high heels are much easier to pole in than normal heels. I think 6 inches just happens to be the perfect height and angle for pirouettes, grinds, etc. as I find myself performing these moves on my tippy-tip toes all the time anyway. So in a way, they help you keep form. Also, rubbers soles=hella traction. Oh, and top of the foot protection for when you do toes slides.
One caveat: how is it so expensive to look this cheap?!! These were seriously pricey. And I had to go to a sex store to buy them. (They were next to booty shorts with dollar signs on them).
So. Much. Pain.
…but look what they do for your legs!
oh shit, is that a scuff?!!
nooooo
oh well. at least I’m still FABULOUS.
3. Gloves
Yeah, I’m actually not loving these. I got them to save my hands (mad callouses, yo) but I’m finding my own grip is better than tack. Go figure. Also, the second your hands get sweaty they slide off. Then it’s just one velcro strap away from oblivion. Oh well, they look cute.
Air walk!
4. Humidifier
I just feel like humidity helps me stick, OKAY?!
weird, but in my mind humidity helps me stick. LEAVE ME ALONE.
5. Towel
Sweaty hands.
obviously.
6. Music
I don’t always listen to depressing music… but when I do, it’s probably Al Green. And I probably have something in my eye. *sniff*
again, obviously.
adaptor=being able to play my music places. BECAUSE APPLE KEEPS CHANGING EVERYTHING.
7. Ipod adaptor
See gallery.
8. Toe separator sock things
Because the lady at the shoe store said the plastic would stretch and give my toes more room, but that hasn’t happened yet. And I’m worried they’re going to permanently get stuck in the shape of a triangle.
okay, so this is super weird… but I sleep in these after having my toes scrunched up in heels. again, LEAVE ME ALONE.
trying to make them cute and it’s not happening.
9. Tripod
For recordin’ and shit.
tripod! for helping me see what sucks!
10. Pole goal whiteboard
To remind me of what to work on, and give me ideas when I’m stuck.
pole goals! I keep a board of stuff I want to work out for when I blank out. So that I don’t just turn off my music and flop onto my bed when I get stuck, which has been known to happen.
So let me safely assume no one cares about this. Right? Oh my god, I’m the one writing this and I barely care lalalalalala so boring.
I’ll be brief:
1. Splits
Self explanatory. I’m pretty close on my left side. And let’s just pretend straddles don’t exist right now, okay?
(Wouldn’t mind Alethea’s two-disc stretching DVDs regardless, hint hint wink wink).
Seriously though, this is how awkward I feel like I look in my new heels.
2. Heel pownage
I’d still like to WALK in my new heels. But seriously, I just got legit stripper lucites and I can’t even climb in them, let along do stuff where my feet touch the ground.
3. Straight leg inverts
Yeah, right now I’m kinda doing that crunching thing.
4. Aerial inverts
I actually haven’t attempted this at all but it seems much, much harder, no?
5. All my students from this term to come back
My current regulars are so rad!!! 10/10 stars ladies, you’re so fun and excited to learn it makes me pee a little. Please come back FOREVER 😀
6. A few really awesome-yet-not-slutty dance vids I can safely post somewhere
The ones I’ve shot so far have been a strange combination of awkward and unintentionally raunchy (CAMERA ANGLE CHANGES EVERYTHING).
7. My pole to finally break in
Seriously, how long does this f***ing take?! I come home all excited to try something I just did in the studio and fall on my ass. Or worse, my face. Yes, that happened. Yes, I am ashamed. No, don’t tell my mom.
8. New pole shorts
Black + cotton + Forever 21=mad cheap looking after two washes. I want some from the place I got my shoes but they were like $25. Pole shorts, Y U SO SMALL YET SO EXPENSIVE?! Honesty, there’s so little cloth… I don’t understand.
9. Mastering spin pole
By mastering, I mean not screaming and jumping off. Seriously, why is my g-d pole like one of those rodeo bulls on spin mode?
10. A way to work a Silence of the Lambs reference into my curriculum
“It takes the lotion off its skin or else it falls off the pole again” is not working. Seriously no one gets it. Suggestions? Was EVERYONE born before 1994? I can’t even.
Alright, time to stop entertaining myself and teach (SHAMELESS PLUG) my 7pm spins class and 8pm Intro class tonight.
Just this one and a 6pm Spins on Thursday and we’re done for the year! Gah! Come quick! Save yourselves!
So I’ve been seeing a lot of interesting teacher posts lately, in particular one about respect. (Or lackthereof, in the form of student lateness, being self-important and demanding, etc.).
From the point of view of an instructor, yes, please don’t be late. I can’t slow down the class and teach you everything you missed, which will be the basis for everything you’re now going to struggle to learn. Like, I really can’t–it’s in the rule book.But that doesn’t stop me from feeling very bad and guilty about it.
So for my own personal happiness and your personal progress, please be on time. It’s soooooo great to have a roomful of dancers changed and ready to go right on the hour, so if you want me to love your forever AND have a great class, come early and ready to rock.
With that out of the way, I have to say that I don’t really have a lot of complaints about students. The people that are demanding (ie. wanting to be taught something very difficult or a move we’re not learning) usually chill out when they realize the beginner moves I’m teaching are plenty challenging on their own. The ones that have a million complaints (“I need a new pole, mine is too slippery!”) are usually a little insecure about looking awkward, so they make up excuses about things being wrong with the environment, or the move we’re learning, to remove the focus from them. Once you know that as a teacher, you start focusing on ways to help boost confidence, instead of getting defensive or annoyed.
But setting aside those things aside, I have to say: I love questions.
Questions show passion. Questions show engagement. Questions show you trust me! I take that really seriously and no matter what your question is (even if it’s a little silly), I’m happy to answer it. Honestly.
So, here’s a question I recently got after one of my classes (and have gotten before, and asked my own teachers when I was a student). I thought I’d answer it on here in case it might be helpful to someone… or maybe to stir up a few opposing viewpoints!
Question. (From a first time student): My hands are slippery. My friend told me about pole dancing gloves/Dry Hands–should I get some?
So my first reaction to the gloves idea was HELL NO. My second (and the one I actually said out loud) was something like “HELL NO… for now.”
First off, grip gloves, in my opinion, are exclusively reserved for 1. experienced dancers, and 2. tricks.
It’s worth saying that the student that asked me this was brand new, and enrolled in a spins class… so right off the top of my head, I had to tell her that grip gloves are really not going to help with spins.
But more importantly, as a general rule, I really try to steer new students away from grip aids altogether (including Dry Hands).
That’s because, by immediately deferring to aids, you’re starting a pattern of dependency on that item (which gets expensive quickly, if we’re talking about liquid grip). This is often to the detriment of developing your own hand and wrist strength. Simply making your skin stickier (or wearing sticky gloves) really isn’t strengthening your hands–and it’s going to pull and tear more and hurt a lot more in the end. Believe me, I know this because I’ve done it, and you don’t want the blisters. Truth.
In the case of gloves, you’ll save yourself the callouses, but you’re getting cheated out of a fundamental feel for the pole.
A visual reference for how bad a look this is.
Unless you want to spend your entire dance career looking like Jack Nicholson’s character in As Good As It Gets, do yourself a favor and skip gloves until you’re advanced. Not being comfortable dancing with bare hands is a handicap, and a pretty unsightly one at that.
And yes, callouses are part of the fun, so quit yer bitchin’. They’ll protect your hands over time, and they just come with the territory. If you don’t like it, consider a gentler form of dance. Seriously! I get that pole can be tough on your body and skin, and it’s not for everybody.
Of course, there are some exceptions to what I just said:
Exception #1: Safety for advanced dancers.
If you’re working on inversions for over an hour and your hands are sweating (sometimes we all get past the point where Dry Hands can help anymore), I can see how grip gloves can be really useful. Safety being such a huge concern with most of those tricks, you don’t want to worry about sweaty hands when you need to work on building strength and working out form. Totally get that. Mazel.
Exception #2: Dry Hands half way or three-quarters through a class for a beginner.
I absolutely advise against Dry Handing-up before even starting a class. You’re developing a bad habit, as I wrote above. But that said, if you’re really struggling with sweaty hands, a small drop to get you through the last 20-30 minutes of a class is okay in my opinion. Just be conscious of how much you’re using, and make an effort to use the less aggressive aids (frequent pole wipe downs, alcohol on your hands) as long as you can before switching over. I think you’ll see much better progress in your grip and confidence on the pole as a reward for sticking it out.
Any questions for me? Totally disagree? I think I’m going to post/answer whenever I get an interesting or high frequency one from students, but obvis I love questions and comments from other pole bloggers too.
So, one of my nightmares basically came true. And when I say nightmares, I mean I’m literally referring to that dream we’ve all had where we’re about to do something important and we have no pants on.
I forgot my shorts for class yesterday.
I was changing at 7:15 for a 7:30 class and realized I’d packed my short sleeve choli top instead. Whoops.
Another teacher said she might have some shorts I could borrow. They looked just like underwear to me, but I was desperate, so I took them without complaint. It wasn’t until afterwards that she told me they were from Victoria’s Secret, and I said “Oh cool, I didn’t know they made shorts!” And she said, “Oh, well, they’re not… but they’re shorts in here!”
Trying to get back on the horse after a week away… but pimpin’ ain’t easy. I’m dragging ass today, and I’m not even wearing uncomfortable heels yet!
Listening to this to get pumped up for class…
Speaking of comfort, is it just me or is it no longer balls-hot anymore?!
Hooray! I might actually be able to dance at home again (no AC) without blowing a week’s supply of dry hands and going through a creepy amount of washcloths.
See y’all at 7!
And don’t forget–no classes this weekend! Because Labor day, betch.