




From Babies to Adults — Bachata Through Life
La Cocina, El Patio, La Calle, La Sala
The places where Dominican life happens —
where music plays, and where we learn most naturally
From Studios to Santo Domingo
For years I bounced around New York studios, picking up moves here and there. The pattern was always the same: beginner classes were too basic, intermediate meant another routine, and every class ended with a video. I stopped recording after a while, because I knew I’d never watch them.
That’s when it hit me — I wasn’t actually getting better. I was collecting moves, but I couldn’t relate them to the music. If a choreo didn’t match the song I was hearing, what good was it?
Eventually I found a fundamentals course that helped reset my base. Soon after, that same teacher announced a training in the Dominican Republic. A week in a villa outside Santo Domingo. It felt like the natural next step — a chance to push deeper and get closer to the source.
At the end of that training, we all had the same assignment: teach something for five minutes. Most people picked a move. I sat there asking myself: what is it I’d actually want to teach? That’s when I realized — I never really “learned” bachata at all.
Four Levels, Four Places
Nobody ever sat me down to explain rhythm. I didn’t learn counts. Bachata was just in my bones — from the womb, from my parents holding me in the kitchen. So I started tracing my own journey back:
As a baby, it was rhythm in the house — the kitchen radio, my mother pulling me into the music.
As a kid, it was family parties in backyards, basements, parks. Abuelita dragging me up whether I wanted to or not. Nobody cared if I was good. The point was to dance.
As a teenager, it was house parties and clubs — showing off, adding flair, flirting through the music.
As an adult, it became cousins with kids, everyone packed into a living room. The music still playing, but the dancing slower, more intentional.
At first I called them ages — baby, kid, teenager, adult. Later, when I started writing a syllabus, I swapped ages for places. Because that’s where these moments lived.
La Cocina. El Patio. La Calle. La Sala.
Those names captured the rhythm of real life. Not levels on a chart — places where bachata was lived.
Why It’s Different
This path isn’t about tricks or polished routines. It’s not about being IG-ready. Bachata has always been playful, carefree, a little messy. You’re supposed to dance with whoever’s in front of you — from abuelita to a beginner stomping too hard to someone flying through footwork. Fuck it. That’s the point.
At a certain stage, you don’t need more “advanced” moves. You need more music, more partners, more nights on the floor. That’s how rhythm settles into you. That’s how connection gets built.
For me, the Four Levels are a way of condensing thirty years of living bachata into something I can pass on. A bridge for people who didn’t grow up with it but want to feel it.
Closing
Cocina, Patio, Calle, Sala. Four levels, one culture.
This is how I learned, and this is how I teach — not as steps in a studio, but as stages of life.
This is what bachata should feel like.