4350  Define: Tango Moment

ARTICLE INDEX


Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 09:00:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: Yale Tango Club <yaletangoclub@yahoo.com>
Subject: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

Dear friends,

You and me and all of us on this list know what a Tango Moment is. This is as in, ohmigod I had a such tango moment with that guy! Or, I don't know if the milonga was any good or the music or the food, all I know is I had a tango moment that was totally worth the 3-hour drive. Or, ................ (speechless).
Now, I was trying to explain a tango moment to a psychologist friend who doesn't tango but whose professional interest was piqued by its existence. This was hard to do!
Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango moment to a non-tango person?

Tine



************************
www.yaletangoclub.org










Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 01:19:46 +0900
From: "astrid" <astrid@ruby.plala.or.jp>
Subject: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
To: <tango-l@mit.edu>


> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango moment to a

non-tango person?

If it is one of those former New Age people, how about: "the esctasy of
being here now"?

>







Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 09:58:38 -0700
From: "Igor Polk" <ipolk@virtuar.com>
Subject: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
To: <tango-l@mit.edu>

Tango Moment is Happiness. A clean, disconnected, animal, children's
happiness.
It is more than a moment, it lasts for the whole dance.

There are variations, of course.

Igor.






Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 17:10:12 +0000 (GMT)
From: Lucia <curvasreales@yahoo.com.ar>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
To: Igor Polk <ipolk@virtuar.com>, tango-l@mit.edu

Luckily, the Devil is in the variations...

Igor Polk <ipolk@virtuar.com> escribi?: Tango Moment is Happiness. A clean, disconnected, animal, children's
happiness.
It is more than a moment, it lasts for the whole dance.

There are variations, of course.

Igor.





Abr? tu cuenta aqu?




Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 19:00:17 +0100 (BST)
From: Michael McDonald <mcdonald_86@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu


If you can "define it", it's not a tango moment. At least that's my humble opinion:-)

----- Original Message ----



Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2006 1:10:12 PM
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment

Luckily, the Devil is in the variations...

Igor Polk <ipolk@virtuar.com> escribi?: Tango Moment is Happiness. A clean, disconnected, animal, children's
happiness.
It is more than a moment, it lasts for the whole dance.

There are variations, of course.

Igor.





Abr? tu cuenta aqu?








Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 11:09:55 -0700 (MST)
From: Huck Kennedy <huck@eninet.eas.asu.edu>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

Michael McDonald <mcdonald_86@yahoo.com> writes:

>
> If you can "define it", it's not a tango moment.
> At least that's my humble opinion. :-)

Bingo. As a Scouser I once knew said about
something similar, "Those who know don't tell, and
those who tell don't know."

Even though tango had yet to be invented at the
time, Fyodor Tyutchev may have expressed the futility
of trying to describe tango (and other spiritual)
moments best in his poem "Silentium!" (written in
Russian but with this Latin title). Actually, not
only does this poem express this futility, it also
beautifully implies that one should probably QUIT
GABBING AND STFU WHILE DANCING TANGO IF ONE EVER
HOPES TO HAVE A TANGO MOMENT THANKYOUVERYMUCH. :-)

I offer two of the better translations I've seen,
the first of which is by Vladimir Nabokov:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie hidden, and conceal
the way you dream, the things you feel,
Deep in your spirit let them rise
akin to stars in crystal skies
that set before the night is blurred:
delight in them and speak no word.

How can a heart expression find?
How should another know your mind?
Will he discern what quickens you?
A thought once uttered is untrue.
Dimmed is the fountainhead when stirred:
drink at the source and speak no word.

Live in your inner self alone
within your soul a world has grown,
the magic of veiled thoughts that might
be blinded by the outer light,
drowned in the noise of day, unheard...
take in their song and speak no word.

[end]

And another translation by Anatoly Liberman:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie deep, do not reveal
Things that you wish or things you feel;
Within your soul's protected mine
Let them ascend and then decline
Like silent stars in heaven bleak:
Admire their sheen--but do not speak.

How can a heart be put in words?
By others--how can one be heard?
Will people know what you live by?
A thought expressed becomes a lie.
Don't muddy springs that are unique:
Drink from their depth--but do not speak.

Live only in yourself encased;
Your soul contains a world of chaste,
Mysterious thoughts, which outside noise
Robs of their magic and destroys;
The rays of morning make them weak--
Enjoy their song--but do not speak!...

[end]

Huck





Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 12:16:24 -0700 (PDT)
From: Yale Tango Club <yaletangoclub@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

Ghosh. I am just trying to convey something to a non-tango person who *by definition* can't know what a tango moment is, and no amount of shutting up can make a dent in this ignorance. Yes I could tell them to take up tango but that is not the point. Maybe they don't desire to know desperately enough to spend hundreds of hours trying to find out.
Somebody mentioned that a tango moment doesn't necessarily last just a moment. That is true. If lucky, they can last hours or as long as you can stay on your feet.
Tine

Huck Kennedy <huck@eninet.eas.asu.edu> wrote:
Michael McDonald writes:

>
> If you can "define it", it's not a tango moment.
> At least that's my humble opinion. :-)

Bingo. As a Scouser I once knew said about
something similar, "Those who know don't tell, and
those who tell don't know."

Even though tango had yet to be invented at the
time, Fyodor Tyutchev may have expressed the futility
of trying to describe tango (and other spiritual)
moments best in his poem "Silentium!" (written in
Russian but with this Latin title). Actually, not
only does this poem express this futility, it also
beautifully implies that one should probably QUIT
GABBING AND STFU WHILE DANCING TANGO IF ONE EVER
HOPES TO HAVE A TANGO MOMENT THANKYOUVERYMUCH. :-)

I offer two of the better translations I've seen,
the first of which is by Vladimir Nabokov:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie hidden, and conceal
the way you dream, the things you feel,
Deep in your spirit let them rise
akin to stars in crystal skies
that set before the night is blurred:
delight in them and speak no word.

How can a heart expression find?
How should another know your mind?
Will he discern what quickens you?
A thought once uttered is untrue.
Dimmed is the fountainhead when stirred:
drink at the source and speak no word.

Live in your inner self alone
within your soul a world has grown,
the magic of veiled thoughts that might
be blinded by the outer light,
drowned in the noise of day, unheard...
take in their song and speak no word.

[end]

And another translation by Anatoly Liberman:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie deep, do not reveal
Things that you wish or things you feel;
Within your soul's protected mine
Let them ascend and then decline
Like silent stars in heaven bleak:
Admire their sheen--but do not speak.

How can a heart be put in words?
By others--how can one be heard?
Will people know what you live by?
A thought expressed becomes a lie.
Don't muddy springs that are unique:
Drink from their depth--but do not speak.

Live only in yourself encased;
Your soul contains a world of chaste,
Mysterious thoughts, which outside noise
Robs of their magic and destroys;
The rays of morning make them weak--
Enjoy their song--but do not speak!...

[end]

Huck



************************
www.yaletangoclub.org








Date: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 07:26:23 -1200
From: "Michael" <tangomaniac@cavtel.net>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: YaleTangoClub@yahoo.com, tango-l@mit.edu
Cc: tangomaniac@cavtel.net

> Dear friends,

Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango
moment to a non-tango person?

>
> Tine
>

To those who dance tango, no explanation is necessary. To
those who don't dance tango, no explanation is POSSIBLE!!

Michael Ditkoff
Washington, DC







Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 19:32:16 +0000 (GMT)
From: Lucia <curvasreales@yahoo.com.ar>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment The Definitive One
To: YaleTangoClub@yahoo.com, tango-l@mit.edu

Dreaming of Love...

Yale Tango Club <yaletangoclub@yahoo.com> escribi?: Ghosh. I am just trying to convey something to a non-tango person who *by definition* can't know what a tango moment is, and no amount of shutting up can make a dent in this ignorance. Yes I could tell them to take up tango but that is not the point. Maybe they don't desire to know desperately enough to spend hundreds of hours trying to find out.
Somebody mentioned that a tango moment doesn't necessarily last just a moment. That is true. If lucky, they can last hours or as long as you can stay on your feet.
Tine

Huck Kennedy wrote:
Michael McDonald writes:

>
> If you can "define it", it's not a tango moment.
> At least that's my humble opinion. :-)

Bingo. As a Scouser I once knew said about
something similar, "Those who know don't tell, and
those who tell don't know."

Even though tango had yet to be invented at the
time, Fyodor Tyutchev may have expressed the futility
of trying to describe tango (and other spiritual)
moments best in his poem "Silentium!" (written in
Russian but with this Latin title). Actually, not
only does this poem express this futility, it also
beautifully implies that one should probably QUIT
GABBING AND STFU WHILE DANCING TANGO IF ONE EVER
HOPES TO HAVE A TANGO MOMENT THANKYOUVERYMUCH. :-)

I offer two of the better translations I've seen,
the first of which is by Vladimir Nabokov:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie hidden, and conceal
the way you dream, the things you feel,
Deep in your spirit let them rise
akin to stars in crystal skies
that set before the night is blurred:
delight in them and speak no word.

How can a heart expression find?
How should another know your mind?
Will he discern what quickens you?
A thought once uttered is untrue.
Dimmed is the fountainhead when stirred:
drink at the source and speak no word.

Live in your inner self alone
within your soul a world has grown,
the magic of veiled thoughts that might
be blinded by the outer light,
drowned in the noise of day, unheard...
take in their song and speak no word.

[end]

And another translation by Anatoly Liberman:

Silentium!

Speak not, lie deep, do not reveal
Things that you wish or things you feel;
Within your soul's protected mine
Let them ascend and then decline
Like silent stars in heaven bleak:
Admire their sheen--but do not speak.

How can a heart be put in words?
By others--how can one be heard?
Will people know what you live by?
A thought expressed becomes a lie.
Don't muddy springs that are unique:
Drink from their depth--but do not speak.

Live only in yourself encased;
Your soul contains a world of chaste,
Mysterious thoughts, which outside noise
Robs of their magic and destroys;
The rays of morning make them weak--
Enjoy their song--but do not speak!...

[end]

Huck



************************
www.yaletangoclub.org







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?Dejate encontrar!
Descubrilo aqu?




Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 15:44:47 -0400
From: "Neil Liveakos" <neil.liveakos@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: Michael <tangomaniac@cavtel.net>
Cc: yaletangoclub@yahoo.com, tango-l@mit.edu
<737e9d3f0606011244t2e7d2af3x16a1fc3e4c1d976@mail.gmail.com>

A tango moment is the rush of feelings (sentimientos) when the butterfly
(la mariposa) and the lightning bug (el bichito de luz) come together
(siempre juntos).

Neil
www.milonga.us



On 6/1/06, Michael <tangomaniac@cavtel.net> wrote:

>
> > Dear friends,
> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango
> moment to a non-tango person?
> >
> > Tine
> >
>
> To those who dance tango, no explanation is necessary. To
> those who don't dance tango, no explanation is POSSIBLE!!
>
> Michael Ditkoff
> Washington, DC
>
>
>



--
Neil Liveakos
https://milonga.us





Date: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 16:04:52 -0400
From: rtara <rtara@maine.rr.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: Michael <tangomaniac@cavtel.net>, <YaleTangoClub@yahoo.com>,
<tango-l@mit.edu>

I once listened to a very well respected tango maestro expressing disgust at
women who pretended to have "tango moments" while dancing with him.

So, my question is how many people actually fake tango moments?


Robin

Tara Design, Inc.
www.taratangoshoes.com
Toll Free in US: 1-877-906-8272

18 Stillman St.
So. Portland ME 04106
207-741-2992--




> From: Michael <tangomaniac@cavtel.net>
> Date: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 07:26:23 -1200
> To: <YaleTangoClub@yahoo.com>, <tango-l@mit.edu>
> Cc: <tangomaniac@cavtel.net>
> Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
>
>> Dear friends,
> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango
> moment to a non-tango person?
>>
>> Tine
>>
>
> To those who dance tango, no explanation is necessary. To
> those who don't dance tango, no explanation is POSSIBLE!!
>
> Michael Ditkoff
> Washington, DC
>
>







Date: Thu, 01 Jun 2006 16:11:13 -0400
From: Jeff Gaynor <jjg@jqhome.net>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

Michael wrote:

>>Dear friends,
>>
>>
>Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango
>moment to a non-tango person?
>
>
>>
>> Tine
>>
>>
>>
>
>To those who dance tango, no explanation is necessary. To
>those who don't dance tango, no explanation is POSSIBLE!!
>
>

Nobody understands us, boo-hoo-hoo. That's pretty arrogant, don't you
think? What you all are trying to describe (or refusing to, depending on
your bent) is known psychologically as "flow state". One book that's
supposed to be pretty good (nope, haven't read it) is

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060920432/102-9204872-5035317?v=glance&n(3155

Flow state is often found in high level athletes during a peak
performance, as well as musicians, dancers various religious types in
deep meditation.

Jeff





Date: Fri, 02 Jun 2006 10:47:14 +0800
From: Kace <kace@pacific.net.sg>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

Yale Tango Club wrote:

> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango moment to a non-tango person?
>
>

A tango moment is an epiphany moment when you suddenly understand
why it was worth all the blood sweat and tears to learn the
challenging dance of Tango.

In our classes for beginners, we frequently tell them to go out
to the milongas to dance socially, instead of hanging around
practicas and dancing technically with other learners.
We tell them that is the only way to achieve "the tango moment".

They readily understand the concept, even if it is still elusive
like an orgasm to a virgin --- until they pass that portal
themselves, then they are hooked.

kace
tangosingapore.com









Date: Fri, 02 Jun 2006 02:06:19 -0400
From: "TangoDC.com" <spatz@tangoDC.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment
To: tango-L@mit.edu

Hey Tine,

Since so many of us replied to your query, could you report back to us
what your psychologist friend thinks of it all? I, for one, would love
to know if we come off as a bunch of cretins.

You know, in the eyes of a professional.

Thanks,

Jake Spatz
Washington, DC


Yale Tango Club wrote:

> Dear friends,
>
> You and me and all of us on this list know what a Tango Moment is. This is as in, ohmigod I had a such tango moment with that guy! Or, I don't know if the milonga was any good or the music or the food, all I know is I had a tango moment that was totally worth the 3-hour drive. Or, ................ (speechless).
> Now, I was trying to explain a tango moment to a psychologist friend who doesn't tango but whose professional interest was piqued by its existence. This was hard to do!
> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango moment to a non-tango person?
>
> Tine
>
>
>
> ************************
> www.yaletangoclub.org
>
>
>
>
>
>





Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 00:28:16 -0600
From: "David Hodgson" <DHodgson@Tango777.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment.. from Hafiz...

Now this was worth posting and giving my opinion of the dance of Tango.


A Barroom View of Love

I would not want all my words
To parade around this world
In pretty costumes,

So I will tell you something
Of the Barroom view of Love.

Love is grabbing hold of the Great Lion's mane
And wrestling and rolling deep into Existence

While the Beloved gets rough
And begins to maul you alive.

True Love, my dear,
Is putting an ironclad grip upon

The soft, swollen balls
Of a Divine Rogue Elephant

And
Not having the good fortune to Die!
--Hafiz




-----Original Message-----



Sent: Friday, June 02, 2006 12:06 AM
To: tango-L@mit.edu
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Define: Tango Moment

Hey Tine,

Since so many of us replied to your query, could you report back to us
what your psychologist friend thinks of it all? I, for one, would love
to know if we come off as a bunch of cretins.

You know, in the eyes of a professional.

Thanks,

Jake Spatz
Washington, DC


Yale Tango Club wrote:

> Dear friends,
>
> You and me and all of us on this list know what a Tango Moment is. This

is as in, ohmigod I had a such tango moment with that guy! Or, I don't know
if the milonga was any good or the music or the food, all I know is I had a
tango moment that was totally worth the 3-hour drive. Or, ................
(speechless).

> Now, I was trying to explain a tango moment to a psychologist friend who

doesn't tango but whose professional interest was piqued by its existence.
This was hard to do!

> Do any of you have any good one-liners to define a tango moment to a

non-tango person?

>
> Tine
>
>
>
> ************************
> www.yaletangoclub.org
>
>
>
>
>
>







Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 09:27:13 -0600
From: "Tango Mail" <tango@springssauna.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Tango Moment


Surprisingly no one has referenced Barbara Durr's work in progress, "Chasing the Ghost". It's been over a year
since I spoke to her about it, but if my memory serves me right, it is going to be about the old
Milongueros of BsAs who described the "tango moment" as "chasing the ghost", because it is always
elusive and happens oh so very rarely. I know it is the reason I keep dancing and coming back even if I had an
awful night/weekend/festival. I'm hooked on that feeling.

Cheerio

JK of CS




Date: Fri, 02 Jun 2006 08:37:50 -0700
From: Donna <sfdonnamite@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
To: Igor Polk <ipolk@virtuar.com>
Cc: tango-l@mit.edu

Dancing tango for 12 years and in 6 countries including the US.I am
speaking as a follower.
I can tell you those tango moments have been few and far between and are
felt by both partners

I call them tangasms. It has been a combination of trust,great
respect,and a feeling of being elevated and allowed to create and move
with the leader.Ususallly the leader is very well seasoned and
experienced and knows to dance with strong intention.
A memorable experience for both.Without verbal orders or even speaking.

After experiencing such a 91/2 minute life,one is is always trying to
recreate this.
The memory stays longer than a dance or a tanda.
One is always seeking this beautiful moment.

My first feeling of trust is when a leader extends thier hand and the
way they extend it.
For me it tells a whole story of what is to come.

As one tanguero in Argentina put it, the woman in your arms should feel
and look like a queen!!!

The only words spoken after the tanda,"was that as good for you as it
was for me????"

I will try again in Montrial.
Donna




Igor Polk wrote:

>Tango Moment is Happiness. A clean, disconnected, animal, children's
>happiness.
>It is more than a moment, it lasts for the whole dance.
>
>There are variations, of course.
>
>Igor.
>
>
>
>








Date: Sat, 3 Jun 2006 01:44:14 +0900
From: "astrid" <astrid@ruby.plala.or.jp>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Fw: Define: Tango Moment
Cc: <tango-l@mit.edu>


> The only words spoken after the tanda,"was that as good for you as it
> was for me????"

I was waiting for someone to bring that up... Actually, IMO, if that
question is asked, something has been seriously missing from the
experience...

; )
Astrid







Date: Sun, 4 Jun 2006 12:42:11 -0400
From: jackie ling wong <jackie.wong@adelphia.net>
Subject: [Tango-L] tango moment
To: tango-l@mit.edu

ummmm... i'm thinking that because this person in the psychology
field that she would like the moment described in a language she
would understand... so here's my attempt

a friend of mine is a rock climber and he is very much driven by his
struggle to overcome his fear of heights. we decided that much of
life is driven by fears... fear of rejection... fear of intimacy...
fear of failure... fear of achievement... the list goes on and on...

so how does this relate to tango? when i explain tango to beginners
i mention connection and then ask what do they think they need to be
connected to... most people say your partner and the music. i also
add the floor, the people around you, and also the spaces between the
people around you... but most important you must be connected to
yourself...

when you dance you bring your issues with you. we have a student who
is in extensive therapy who has issues of trust... and it shows in
her dance... not only does she not trust her partner to lead her and
keep her safe, she doesn't trust herself. we can talk ourselves
until we're blue in the face about technique but nothing will change
until she trusts.

so first for the tango moment to happen, you have to overcome
relevant personal fears and subsequent insecurities and find your
"center".. the emotional/spiritual center... you need to be
comfortable with yourself and open to the moment. that complete
trust and abandonment of fears is what makes tango so attractive to
me. walking into someone's arms and being there 100 % and feeling
them respond in the same way is magical.

jackie
www.tangopulse.net










Date: Sun, 04 Jun 2006 14:18:04 -0400
From: "TangoDC.com" <spatz@tangoDC.com>
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] tango moment
To: tango-L@mit.edu

Hi Jackie,

Very nice point.

This reminds me of an astute comment a friend of mine once made to me.
She said that there are three major things that attract people to the
dance: the music, the connection, and the moves. (There may have been a
fourth, but I can't recall the conversation well enough, alas.) She
pinpointed me as one who dances for the music: no matter what it is, I'm
going to connect to it, dance to it, live for it. Others, she advised
me-- and a large portion of others-- dance for the connection. They want
it, no matter what else they get. (I've since seen a few people who
dance primarily for the moves-- they're the ones who have no connection
to the social circuit, and seemingly no connection to the music. A lot
of stage performance is like this, I find.)

Anyway, I thought the notion a wise one. It seems like it would apply
especially well to discussions of the "tango moment" (whatever those
words mean to you, so long as they mean something), because it seems
like at such times, Everything becomes suffused with the main event, as
it were. Also, I suspect that this way of looking at things can help us
better understand how there are different kinds (and degrees) of tango
moments-- a clarification I stumbled through in a prior post on the subject.

Any other thoughts?

Jake Spatz
Washington, DC


jackie ling wong wrote:

> ummmm... i'm thinking that because this person in the psychology
> field that she would like the moment described in a language she
> would understand... so here's my attempt
>
> a friend of mine is a rock climber and he is very much driven by his
> struggle to overcome his fear of heights. we decided that much of
> life is driven by fears... fear of rejection... fear of intimacy...
> fear of failure... fear of achievement... the list goes on and on...
>
> so how does this relate to tango? when i explain tango to beginners
> i mention connection and then ask what do they think they need to be
> connected to... most people say your partner and the music. i also
> add the floor, the people around you, and also the spaces between the
> people around you... but most important you must be connected to
> yourself...
>
> when you dance you bring your issues with you. we have a student who
> is in extensive therapy who has issues of trust... and it shows in
> her dance... not only does she not trust her partner to lead her and
> keep her safe, she doesn't trust herself. we can talk ourselves
> until we're blue in the face about technique but nothing will change
> until she trusts.
>
> so first for the tango moment to happen, you have to overcome
> relevant personal fears and subsequent insecurities and find your
> "center".. the emotional/spiritual center... you need to be
> comfortable with yourself and open to the moment. that complete
> trust and abandonment of fears is what makes tango so attractive to
> me. walking into someone's arms and being there 100 % and feeling
> them respond in the same way is magical.
>
> jackie
> www.tangopulse.net
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>





Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2006 00:30:34 -0600
From: "Bruno Romero" <romerob@telusplanet.net>
Subject: [Tango-L] tango moment
To: <tango-l@mit.edu>

A tango moment for me is like navigating on an imaginary sailboat. This is
going through a timely sequence of actions raising the sails at the right
time and sequence waiting until the right wind comes by and pushes us into
open waters. When a girlfriend of mine and I dance to the right mix of tango
music with no plan to seek a tango moment, but just to have fun. By chance,
we come across to a series of tangos played in a sequence, where each and
every other tango music played thereafter adds energy on us until the right
tango music comes upon, and just tops all previous tangos played. We are
then rocking.



Bruno




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