vimarsana.com

Card image cap


Photo: YakobchukOlena/Getty Images
In recent years, there has been a fad for taking cues from our early ancestors to improve our health today. We know that we didn’t evolve for our current sedentary lifestyles, and we understand the ways our bodies were optimized for endurance exercise like long-distance running. But one under-discussed element of our fitness evolution is the hours-long dance party.
Take, for instance, the San people of the Kalahari Desert in Southern Africa. In the 1950s, anthropologist Laurence Marshall and his family spent months at a time with these indigenous people, who were then still hunter-gatherers. About once a week, they observed the San medicine dances, typically beginning after dusk when everyone would hang out by the fire. As both men and women sang joyously and clapped to ancient songs, a handful of men would start dancing in a winding, twisting line around the group, stomping out the song’s beat, often adding extra light steps. Men would do most of the dancing, but women would also dance a turn or two when the mood was upon them. As the night drew on and the fervor of the hypnotic dance steadily increased, more men joined in, and by dawn some begin to enter a trancelike state, which they call “half-death.” The San believed there was great power in this half-conscious state, which freed the medicine men’s spirits to communicate between this and other worlds, to draw out manifest sicknesses and as-yet-unrevealed ills, and to protect people from unseen but lurking dangers.

Related Keywords

Tarahumara , Sonora , Mexico , Tanzania , Jane Austen , Laurence Marshall , Louis Liebenberg , Club Quarantine , Evolutionary Case , Kalahari Desert , தாரஹுமாரா , சோனோரா , மெக்ஸிகோ , தான்சானியா , ஜேன் ஆஸ்டெந் , லாரன்ஸ் மார்ஷல் , சங்கம் தனிமைப்படுத்துதல் , பரிணாம வளர்ச்சி வழக்கு , கேலஹாரீ பாலைவனம் ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.