In Beatrice Francois' movement classes, campers wave ribbons in rhythmic dancing.
In addition to painting she led the children through life lessons using clay, free rhythmic dancing, and creative writing.
She had her students engage in 'free rhythmic dancing.'
They found that entoptic phenomena can occur through rhythmic dancing, music, sensory deprivation, hyperventilation, prolonged and intense concentration and migraines.
After several minutes of rhythmic dancing to pounding drums, the spirits arrived, seizing a woman and a man.
The Sufi services best known in the West are the chanting and rhythmic dancing of the whirling dervishes or Mevlevi Sufis of Turkey.
A reporter for The Paris Times wrote in 1928, "When she reaches her full capacity for rhythmic dancing, James Joyce may yet be known as his daughter's father."
In the first centuries of the city ritual celebrations included rhythmic dancing, derived from Phoenician traditions.
Here an individual would attempt through rhythmic dancing and chanting to disconnect from their plane of existence and create a connection with the metaphysical entities that govern their belief system.