In the heart of every capoeira roda—a swirling circle of movement, rhythm, and strategy—two foundational moves are ever-present: ginga, the perpetual sway that keeps a fighter agile, and esquiva, the art of dodging with grace. While these are essential tools for a capoeirista, they hold surprisingly powerful lessons for navigating IT projects as well.

Ginga: The Constant Motion of Project Readiness
In capoeira, ginga is never static. It’s a dance-like movement that disguises intention, keeps the body fluid, and prepares for both offense and defense. In IT, ginga is your project rhythm—your agile sprints, your iteration cycles, your stand-ups. It’s how a team stays in motion even when the destination is uncertain.
When you’re managing a software delivery cycle, staying still—or sticking rigidly to a plan—is often more dangerous than moving. Requirements change. Stakeholders pivot. New vulnerabilities are discovered. Teams that ginga, metaphorically, are already in motion and can adapt with less disruption.
Ginga also builds resilience. It’s not about knowing exactly what will happen; it’s about being ready for whatever might happen. The project team that keeps swaying, anticipating the next move, is far more likely to handle surprises than one that’s flat-footed.
Esquiva: The Strategic Dodge
Esquiva is not running away. It’s calculated evasion. In capoeira, esquiva is used to slip past an attack with control and elegance—never turning your back, always staying in the game.
In an IT context, esquiva is about strategic avoidance. It’s choosing not to engage in office politics, not chasing every shiny new feature request, not falling for scope creep. It’s saying “no” diplomatically, ducking without disconnecting. It’s declining that unscoped integration when the cost outweighs the value, or pausing a launch because the telemetry isn’t ready.
Practicing esquiva means you remain focused on what matters without getting knocked down by distractions or unrealistic expectations. Just like in the roda, you’re not abandoning the game—you’re staying in it smartly.
The Roda: A Circle of Collaboration and Challenge
In capoeira, the roda is the space of play, performance, and pressure. It’s social, visible, and sometimes unpredictable. Sound familiar?
An IT project lives in its own kind of roda—surrounded by executives, users, developers, and operations. Moves are seen, judged, and often mirrored. The key is not to dominate the roda but to understand its rhythm, engage with awareness, and flow with the energy in the circle.
Conclusion: Move with Intent, Dodge with Grace
Whether you’re coding a backend service, managing a cloud migration, or wrangling security policies, channeling the spirit of ginga and esquiva will make you a better practitioner. Stay in motion. Anticipate change. Dodge when you must, but never leave the circle.
Like capoeira, IT projects aren’t about brute strength—they’re about rhythm, timing, awareness, and collaboration.
Keep swaying. Keep dodging. Keep playing.
How to dodging?