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Dance therapy getting seniors back on their feet — and the dance floor

WATCH ABOVE: Christian Sénéchal and Luca “Lazylegz” Patuelli talk about the very first International Symposium for Dance and Well-Being – May 24, 2018

Marcelle Thomas says it took a little convincing to get her husband to take dance therapy classes at Les Grands Ballets Canadiens with her.

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Now that she’s got him in the dance studio, she says he hasn’t turned back.

“He’s the only man in the group, so he enjoys it very much,” laughs Thomas.

“[He feels] a little bit special. He’s spoiled.”

READ MORE: Montreal dance teacher’s therapy classes lets special needs students express themselves freely

She explains the changes in her body are not only physical — they’re emotional and mental, too.

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“I think it’s joy, the happiness that it brings you,” Thomas told Global News.

“I took enough classes to see the change in myself. I can see myself moving differently, thinking a little bit differently and emotionally, I would say I’m more open.”

WATCH BELOW: Dance therapy lets special needs students feel free

At the age of 70, Thomas says she’s lucky to still feel so good in her skin, and takes the class to stay healthy.

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“I feel my body shrinking at times, so I really opened and my posture is better, my breathing is better. Everything. I’m younger,” she said.

READ MORE: Dance class gives seniors with dementia a lift

Thursday marks the beginning of a three-day event to bring together over 40 specialists to share their knowledge about how dance and movement can improve people’s health — including how they feel about themselves.

“It’s to see how dance could bring a better quality of life,” explained Christian Sénéchal, the centre’s director.

“Usually when you are dancing, you’re dancing in a group so there’s socializing. When you’re dancing you can express yourself differently without speaking.”

WATCH BELOW: New Brunswick senior line dancer side steps her way to recovery following stroke

It’s the first edition of the International Symposium for Dance and Wellbeing, an initiative of Les Grands Ballets Canadiens’ National Centre for Dance Therapy.

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READ MORE: Seniors hold dance flash mob in North Vancouver

The event will offer lectures, panel discussions and workshops, bringing together professionals from all over the world who work in the fields of dance, medicine, academic research and therapy.

Thomas says the classes have opened up her mind — and her husband’s mind — to try new things.

“Now that we take dance therapy, my husband tells me, ‘we should take tango now,’ and before, he always refused,” she told Global News.

“We’re more easily able to dance together now. We enjoy it so much.”

If you or someone you know is interested in taking dance therapy classes, click on the links below:

rachel.lau@globalnews.ca

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