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Sugar Push History › Revision 2

Revision 2

archivist · Jul 13, 2026, 1:41 PM · Added Common variations section (handholds)

Changes from revision 1

The sugar push is usually the first pattern taught in West Coast Swing, and many dancers argue it stays the hardest to do *well* for your entire dancing life.
 
## The shape
 
A 6-count pattern danced in the slot. The follower travels toward the leader, reaches a two-hand (or one-hand) compression, and returns to roughly where they started. Unlike most WCS patterns, the follower does not pass the leader.
 
- **1–2**: follower walks forward toward the leader (walk, walk)
- **3&4**: follower arrives with a triple, connection compresses ("catch")
- **5&6**: anchor step — both partners settle away from each other and re-establish leverage
 
## What it teaches
 
The sugar push is the purest expression of WCS **elastic connection**: extension into compression into extension. Commonly taught points include keeping the arms relaxed so the connection moves your body (not your shoulders), and letting the compression on 3&4 come from body positioning rather than pushing with the hands.
 
+## Common variations
+ 
+The skeleton stays the same across handholds — list the variant in a clip's note when you spot one:
+ 
+- **Two-hand** — both hands connected; the most common classroom version, with compression split across both arms.
+- **Right-to-left (standard one-hand)** — leader's left to follower's right; frees a hand for styling and hand changes.
+- **Right-to-right (handshake)** — sets up tucks, hand changes behind the back, and crossed-hand shapes.
+- **Left-to-left** — less common; usually a deliberate setup for a specific next pattern.
+- **One-hand with resistance styling, no-hands (body-lead) push** — advanced connection play on the same geometry.
+ 
## Naming
 
Widely also called the **push break**, especially in scenes with roots in East Coast Swing pedagogy. Both names are heard at every event; neither is wrong.
Page as of this revision

Sugar Push

beginner

also known as: Push Break · 6-Count Push

The sugar push is usually the first pattern taught in West Coast Swing, and many dancers argue it stays the hardest to do well for your entire dancing life.

The shape

A 6-count pattern danced in the slot. The follower travels toward the leader, reaches a two-hand (or one-hand) compression, and returns to roughly where they started. Unlike most WCS patterns, the follower does not pass the leader.

  • 1–2: follower walks forward toward the leader (walk, walk)
  • 3&4: follower arrives with a triple, connection compresses ("catch")
  • 5&6: anchor step — both partners settle away from each other and re-establish leverage

What it teaches

The sugar push is the purest expression of WCS elastic connection: extension into compression into extension. Commonly taught points include keeping the arms relaxed so the connection moves your body (not your shoulders), and letting the compression on 3&4 come from body positioning rather than pushing with the hands.

Common variations

The skeleton stays the same across handholds — list the variant in a clip's note when you spot one:

  • Two-hand — both hands connected; the most common classroom version, with compression split across both arms.
  • Right-to-left (standard one-hand) — leader's left to follower's right; frees a hand for styling and hand changes.
  • Right-to-right (handshake) — sets up tucks, hand changes behind the back, and crossed-hand shapes.
  • Left-to-left — less common; usually a deliberate setup for a specific next pattern.
  • One-hand with resistance styling, no-hands (body-lead) push — advanced connection play on the same geometry.

Naming

Widely also called the push break, especially in scenes with roots in East Coast Swing pedagogy. Both names are heard at every event; neither is wrong.