Introduction

First and foremost, I want you to know that we care—about you, your hopes, and your dreams. Although The Dancer’s Way is directed toward the 11 million people engaged in some form of dance in the United States, anyone with an interest in fitness can benefit from our holistic approach to exercise. The book New York City Ballet Workout by Peter Martins and New York City Ballet, with Howard Kaplan, showed readers how to build leanness and flexibility in the muscles and limbs through the magic of ballet. This guide takes you to the next level to achieve peak performance by sharing the secrets of dancers in one of the world’s greatest companies.

Peter Martins, Ballet Master in Chief of New York City Ballet, opened the door to our wellness program in 2001, based on research I conducted with my colleagues, William G. Hamilton, M.D., Marika Molnar, P.T., and Lawrence DeMann, Jr., D.C. We designed the program to help dancers reach their potential without compromising their health, with annual screenings, educational seminars, cooking classes, and individual counseling. Traditionally, dancers and companies focus on technique, treating problems after they occur. Now we recognize that the beneficial aspects of dancing can be undermined by risk factors such as constant stress, sleep deprivation, and poor nutrition. What makes our approach so special is that in only three years, it has cut disability in NYCB by 46 percent, impressive considering that ballet is more physically and mentally demanding than professional football.

My contribution as the company’s wellness consultant involves helping dancers cope with occupational stress. I should know. Being a former dancer who dropped out of high school to join NYCB, I learned the hard way, after enduring multiple sprained ankles, a bad back, and “jumper’s knee,” that overworking was my downfall. Dancers have a great work ethic, but, like many high achievers, we often feel uncomfortable with the idea of pacing ourselves or being patient enough to completely rehabilitate an injury. Instead, we do more classes, more exercises, and, often, more damage. After my fourth sprained ankle, I realized that dancers and other practicing athletes needed reliable information to help avoid injuries. No matter how you slice it, there is no way to achieve your goals on crutches.

My decision to help myself and others had several effects. First, I was able to recover from my current injury by doing Pilates before returning to dance class. This exercise program helped me overcome my usual impatience with being unable to dance and kept me safer from serious injuries by helping me maintain my overall strength and flexibility. I also decided to pursue higher education—but first I had to pass my high school equivalency test. My goal was to become a psychologist who specialized in the performing arts. Peter Martins played a significant role in making this dream come true by allowing me to attend school full-time for eight years while performing. My primary responsibility through it all was to stay in shape as a dancer.

Since receiving my doctorate in clinical and research psychology, I have done extensive epidemiological studies on occupational stress in dancers from America, Europe, China, and Russia, in addition to consulting with dancers in my private practice. I have also sought to reduce work-related problems through my monthly advice column in Dance Magazine, which I’ve been writing since 1992. I have written two books and more than fifty articles on topics as varied as weight management and performance anxiety. These experiences, combined with my own as a performer, have made me acutely aware of the challenges and needs of dancers.

I wrote this book to help serious dancers maintain a healthy mind and body while performing, based on what we have learned at NYCB’s wellness program. While many readers may consider highly trained professionals to be out of their league, everyone can benefit from our program’s scientific principles, which have been refined to meet the needs of dancers of varying ages, styles, and fitness levels. This guide is geared primarily to female dance students and professionals eighteen to thirty-eight years old, with special tips for youngsters.

In Part 1 of this book, I outline the challenges in dance, and how our wellness program can help you achieve your goals by establishing a healthy lifestyle and navigating the road to change.

In Part 2 readers will learn ways to avoid common roadblocks to fitness, including stress, burnout, injuries, and eating problems, with our five keys to peak performance:

1. Good work habits

2. Cross-training activities

3. Eating right to stay fit

4. Effective weight control strategies

5. Stress management techniques

Understanding how the five keys affect performance will be critical to your success. Many dancers struggle with a no pain, no gain attitude, and they tend to ignore chronic signs of hunger or fatigue. Others demand perfection without making allowances for growth spurts, mistakes, or minor anatomical differences, such as unequal turnout. While it is common for high achievers to go for the gold at the expense of their health, lack of information can result in a serious injury. In extreme cases, it can mean the end of a promising career. This book provides crucial insights into each key, how it is helpful, and the various options that are especially effective for dancers.

Part 3 includes a number of useful resources, and describes in detail several beneficial annual screenings, which you can duplicate with a dance medicine specialist. A final component involves the use of diaries to modify food intake and emotional stress.

Interviews with NYCB performers and dance medicine specialists are included throughout the book. Readers will follow two injured members of the company, Abi Stafford and Megan LeCrone, as they recover and are able to return to the stage. There are also composites of clients from my private practice to illustrate the concerns of dancers outside the company; in these cases, the names and identifying characteristics have been changed to preserve anonymity.

My job is to help dancers develop a healthy approach to fitness by offering advice, removing barriers, and clarifying goals at each step of the way. In this book, I offer you the same heartfelt guidance. Change is scary, but it provides a unique opportunity to learn, to grow, and to hope for a brighter future—as a dancer and as a person!