Dr. Shades wrote:harmony wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:Can anyone here explain what in holy Hell "dance with the broom" means?
Supposedly, the guys were supposed to dance with all the girls, not just one. A guy who danced with only one girl was given the broom to dance with, I guess to remind him of all the girls he hadn't danced with.
So was he supposed to drop the girl he'd spent all night dancing with and dance with a broom instead? Wouldn't she get jealous of the broom?
He was supposed to get the hint that there were lots of girls who weren't dancing, I guess. Had he danced with the broom, or with another girl, I'd have walked out and called my mom to come get me. I was nice, but I wasn't that nice!
And was there ever any guy with little enough backbone that he actually did, literally, dance with it instead of just laughing and propping it up in the corner?
I don't know. I didn't exactly haunt LDS dances when I was a teenager. I went to them with a date, never stag, so I wasn't one of the girls standing around the outside of the room, wishing I was dancing.
A friend of mine said when he was a teenager, he'd walk into the gym, grab the first girl standing around on the outside and dance. He'd work his way around the room, and dance with as many girls as he could. (He never danced with the broom), so many of the girls had at least one dance. Guys like him were rare. Mostly the guys brought dates who they danced with, or else stood around the refreshment table eating with their buddies, dancing with no one. More often than not, it looked to me like the girls danced with each other (in those days, girls didn't ask guys to dance. It simply wasn't done).
Even today when I attend ward dances, the girls really like dances like the line dances or Virginia Reels, where they don't have to have a partner and everyone can join in. Kids still gather in corners with their own gender, afraid to move out of their comfort zones.