Innate Human Rhythm and Dance Skills Could Be a Genetic Brain Flaw

There have been many studies on people with brainslight theory; good rhythm and dance skills, at the
disorders, and their inability to do certain tasks, whileinnate level, could be a genetic flaw which is caused
other tasks seem to be unaffected. In fact, many offrom a brain which is not fully coupled together,
these brain disorders seem to indicate that if youtherefore, it can work separately, and dancing
have really good rhythm and are good at dancing tobecomes quite easy.
music, it is because you are able to set your body onTo further discuss this theory further, I'd like to talk
autopilot, and you are able to disconnect from oneabout alcohol, and how when people drink a lot they
part of the brain to the other.tend to be better at dancing to the rhythm. No, not
In this way your body flows to the music, withouttoo much drinking, but just enough to slightly impair
you having to think about it, you literally let loose,their cognitive abilities. You see, due to the uncoupling
and your body just does it automatically. It wasof various parts of the brain, the body can respond
discovered that a young man who was 16 years old,to rhythm since other parts of the brain are turned
with an IQ of 50, barely functioning at aoff and thus, do not interfere.
seven-year-old level, had trouble with his dexterity,Which brings up a point that those who are innately
and he couldn't read, write, or understand what therhythmitic naturally might have these abilities due to
notes were on the music sheet he was reading.deformed, genetically flawed, or mal-connected
But when you gave him a musical instrument andbrains, or their brains are genetically wired differently,
turned on the music he could play it as if there wasthus, allowing them to do this easier, while perhaps
no problem at all. Scientists wonder why this is evenhaving less ability to do other things. Please think on
possible, but this is one way they learn the secretsthis.
of how the human mind works. Therefore, I have a