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Photo: Magalí Druscovich.
Manuel Firmani, center left, is a professional tango dancer who leads the Parkinson’s tango workshops in Argentina, along with Veronica Litvak, center right.

Where I live now, a few residents have Parkinson’s Disease. It’s a rough diagnosis, but there is lots of physical therapy available from trained professionals. I’m going to check if they have ever used tango. As today’s article suggests, tango can work wonders with patients.

Pam Belluck writes at the New York Times, “Tango is the national dance of Argentina, known for its passion, precision and heart. In a hospital in Buenos Aires, it has another purpose: as a therapy for patients with Parkinson’s disease. Once a week, about a dozen patients come to Ramos Mejía Hospital to dance — a session that uses the movements of tango to help address issues of balance, stiffness and coordination. The goal is to give them approaches to movement that they can use in their daily lives, as well as a social and emotional boost from moving to music.

“The program began about 15 years ago, inspired by a patient who had danced tango since childhood and found it offered strategies that improved her mobility and gait problems, said Dr. Nélida Garretto, a neurologist who helped spearhead the sessions.

“Dr. Tomoko Arakaki, another neurologist leading the program, said Parkinson’s patients can struggle with the stop-and-start motions of walking and can benefit from practicing the slow, short steps’ and pauses of tango. Dr. Garretto said that because tango involves ‘multitasking with motor stimuli, visual stimuli and auditory stimuli,’ it can help patients execute the series of small movements in everyday activities.

“First, warm-up exercises, usually in a circle, ‘try to tune everyone in, to prepare the body, to awaken the body,’ said Manuel Firmani, a professional tango dancer leading the workshops. Some are done standing, some seated, depending on ‘the state people are in,’ he said. …

“After exercises focusing on posture, balance and other skills, dancing begins. Each patient is paired with a partner who doesn’t have Parkinson’s, often friends, relatives or volunteers.

“Dance therapy is used for other medical conditions, including multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s. Débora Rabinovich, a psychologist and researcher who helped create the Argentine program, said her research has found that ‘tango uses the same kind of movements that people with Parkinson’s disease tend to lose.’ …

“Some tango steps seem especially helpful. The sanguchito, or ‘sandwich,’ a classic move in which one dancer’s foot slides between the partner’s feet and pauses, offers Parkinson’s patients clear cues to guide their bodies, Dr. Rabinovich said.

“ ‘Another fundamental tango element is shifting weight from one foot to the other’ said Mr. Firmani, who encourages patients to use that move for activities like stepping up on curbs or entering doorways. He said that the sidestep in tango could help with opening a refrigerator, and that ‘torso rotation’ could apply to pivoting while washing dishes. …

“Sometimes, patients who came to class using canes gain such confidence that they leave without their canes.

“Liliana Garay, 59, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s two decades ago and started the program in 2011, with no tango-dancing experience. She said it has helped her stiffness and with weakness she feels when her medication’s effect ebbs. At home, when symptoms arise, she practices an eight-step tango movement, pivoting her feet to trace ‘the number eight on the floor, like the infinity symbol.’

“When she freezes and gets stuck while bending to pick up something, she will breathe and move her leg backward, sideways and forward, as they do in tango class. ‘That helps the stiffness pass, and I can walk again,’ she said. …

“There are other tango therapy programs for Parkinson’s patients, including in the United States. The Buenos Aires program, which has served about 100 patients, draws on the social and cultural significance of tango in Argentina, focusing on classic moves and music that resonates with the patients, Dr. Rabinovich said.

“That connection gives participants an emotional boost. ‘For people who have a sense that their bodies are kind of betraying them, it gives you the possibility to feel your body in a completely different way,’ she said. ‘You can be barely moving, but you feel like you danced.’

“For Ms. Garay, who travels a long distance on public transportation to get to the workshop, its benefits are so powerful that she has started tango parties, or milongas, in her town, Ciudadela. …

“The experience is transformative, she finds. ‘People come in wheelchairs, with crutches, and we all dance, and an amazing atmosphere is created,’ she said. When the class ends, she feels different.

“ ‘Tango, for me,’ she said, ‘is health.’ ”

More at the Times, here.

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Photo: Kris Craig/The Providence Journal.
Guerrilla Tango on the Van Leeston Pedestrian Bridge over the Providence River in Rhode Island.

Do you love reading about new ways people find to have fun? You don’t always need to spend money for entertainment. Check out what Kris Craig wrote at the Providence Journal.

“In the last rays of a beautiful Sunday in September, Susan Davis of Providence Tango finds an open spot and wheels a small black speaker to a corner railing around a lower deck of the Michael Van Leesten Memorial pedestrian bridge. She starts the music, and with it begins an evening of Guerrilla Tango.

“Everything around the bridge ebbs and flows, with people enjoying the mild late-day weather. And then, like a mist coming off the Providence River, the music rises, a beacon to a small, selective population, drawing tango true believers onto the planks and into the evening. 

“This is Milonga, a tango dance party, social dancing that is all about connection and community.

“Davis, who organizes these summer-long monthly events, will tell you this tango is about feeling quiet and sensitive to your partner of the moment and the others around you.

“As dancers accumulate on the decks to the side of the bridge, faces beam. There are a few newcomers and out-of-towners, but these people are not strangers.

All are part of the small New England tango community, moved by digital bulletin boards and word-of-mouth to the Guerrilla Tango.

“On the wooden planks of the bridge, street shoes are swapped for shiny black patent leathers for men and ankle-strapped high heels or stilletos for women. Hints of piano, violin and the accordion-like bandoneon coax the arrivals to finish changing quickly.

“The dancers pair off on the fly with provisional partners and ease into the tempo, and the scene transforms. The smiles of greeting fall away and the couples become one, as if the closeness of torsos and the placement of hands – one near the middle of the back or shoulder, the other gripped lightly with their partner’s – complete a circuit and light a fire in a world unto itself, shared two by two but really by all.

“The impromptu embrace and collective grace of this fluid assembly speak of romance uncoupled, large and free, less amorous than artful. The love is of music and motion. Of life itself. …

“I move from spot to spot, photographing the dancers, making my way around a crowd of spectators on the walkway, and I catch the awe in their appreciative murmurs. 

“A pair of teenage girls laugh their way down the terraces of the bridge, placing hands to bodies, mimicking the dancers, and they move into the mix. I too feel the pull to join the magic, but there are no invites for dilettantes. Knowledge of tango is the price of admission, and unaware guests become meteors wreaking havoc in this synchronized universe. Among the group, some dancers may learn from this evening, but it’s not a dance class. 

“A series of three mostly traditional tangos ends, and the music shifts to a 30-second Cortina, a completely different style. The dancers seem to awaken from a meditative trance. The short respite affords them a glimpse of the banal world surrounding their own before each seeks yet another partner for the next series. Another chance to get lost in the tango.

More at ProJo, here. Catch it next year, tango lovers!

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