Left-side inside chain turn to dip into starter position
This is an 6 beat pattern elongated into an 8 beat pattern because the anchor step is 4 beats to allow the follower to go into closed position. The actual dip happens on beat 5.
Start from an Open position. Lead a left-side inside chain turn up to step 4. On this pattern you are facing 9 o’clock on steps 4 thru 8.
For the footwork, you always stay on the left side of the slot. This means that you do not step across on step 4, instead. On 5 and 6 you don’t do any footwork. You must stand up straight with split weight on your feet. If anything, there should be a little bit more weight on you right leg because the follower is going to dip to the left. Be extremely careful that you are not using your arms to encourage or push the follower into the dip. In the contrary, you should be preemptively provide resistance to your right. Do not add any force towards the direction in which the follower is dipping. It could be catastrophic. Instead preemptively apply force in the opposite direction in which the follower is dipping. This is specially important whenever you are holding the follower by the waist and the right shoulder. It is easy to try to use your hands to encourage the follower into a dip, but do not do that. It is up to the follower to dip as much or as little as she wants.
After the dip, the follower should be looking at 12 o’clock and you should be perpendicular, looking at 9 o’clock.
The dip happens on 5, the follower begins to stand up on 6, and then on 7 8 you shift your weight onto your right foot while the follower does a 0.5 turn clockwise as you “unwind” her from your right arm. At this point you should be in a [starter] position.
From here you can step across as if doing a continuous whip and repeating steps 4 and 5 of a continuous whip. Then stop doing continuous whips and signal this by relaxing your arms and allowing the follower to settle. Then do a inside chain turn from [starter] position.