While we can learn something from Courtney and her family's journey, we should not think that this is the way all gymnast feel or live.
Maybe. More than some people seem to realize though, particularly after a certain age. It's great to say little kids love it but she hasn't said she did anything but love it at those levels and ages. She made her comments about specific times and specific situations. Nor has she said she hates gymnastics or thinks kids shouldn't do it. She's made it very open and obvious that she remains involved with gymnastics by coaching and would have liked to have competed in high school gymnastics her senior year. If anyone is reading into this that she thinks gymnastics is wrong and hates it, then they are willfully interpreting something that is not really there.
gymjoy said:
While I do not condone the abrasive and abusive commenters, I think they might be confusing Courtney's journey and feelings with their own, and that makes them uncomfortable and angry, either because it strikes to close to home or because it is very alien to them. Perhaps they are jealous of her talents. Unfortunately, the anonymous nature of making comments allows them to blurt out their thoughts with out examining them, or using common courtesy. Too bad for them...
Maybe. My thought is that they're parents who don't want to hear what she has to say as they shell out for the privates they think will get their kid to where she got. You'll notice plenty of gymnasts have commented, and agreed with her, or even if they commented peripherally about comments they didn't disagree. I can recognize even some of the anonymous commenters as friends based on their anecdotes, and I assure you they are not liars. So if people want to sit there and say they are lying, then that's too bad, and I hope they never have to deal with some of things she writes about. But of course, if they do high level gymnastics as a teenager, they probably will.
I find it really irritating when people brush off how you feel and act like it could never happen to their kid. They are usually wrong. I am just going to come right out and go there. No one is going to sail smoothly through a gymnastics career like this. If your kids make it that far they WILL have problems and they WILL be devastated at some point and they will have difficulty coming to terms with it. That DOESN'T MEAN they should have never done gymnastics, or gymnastics is worthless or wrong, or they didn't get anything out of it. That is confusing two different things and emotions are never wrong, they just are. When you devote that much of yourself to something it is bound to come at an emotional cost, particularly when you have other elements at play like coaching. And it is not like these kinds of gyms don't exist. I am kind of annoyed that so many people are brushing off her problems because of problems in her family, like that invalidates what she says. In my opinion in her writing she has been clear about delineating those two things.
One of her stories reminded me of one of mine. I started competing in gymnastics late. But when this happened, I was about a L5/6 skill level, but went to a recreational gym. Still I was doing ro bhs and ro bhs bt, vaulting, conditioning, etc. Anyway, I fell and hurt myself, and injury I later recognized as a torn muscle because I did it again when I was 13 or so. But I was afraid to tell anyone, so I went to gymnastics anyway, and did my best. My coach asked me a couple of times if something was wrong because I was moving slowly and wincing, but I somehow managed to tumble, and (the worst) do conditioning like V-ups and candlestick jump ups where I directly had to stretch the areas surrounding the tear. It was excruciating. I remember I would go home and take a bath and it would hurt so much whenever I moved in the tub. I would dread saying the pledge at school because you had to stand up and sit down quickly and that hurt to the point of dizziness. This went on for weeks before I told my mom,
who is a completely sane and normal person who would never be mad at me for getting hurt and had never in any way communicated such an idea to me. Though sadly I have seen parents who probably would get mad. But anyway, that's irrelevant to my story because my parents are sane. I have no idea what I was thinking. She probably doesn't even realize this one time (she would remember the second because I had to miss a big meet and was devastated). The second time, I was old enough not to be stupid and I have no idea how I faked it at all the first time, it was such a painful injury I basically refused to do anything, lol.
But my point is when a kid is young they have crazy ideas and it is hard for them to advocate for themselves or understand an event in the context of reality...which is that if you're young and you're hurt you shouldn't go to gymnastics because gymnastics is not very important in the grand scheme of things. But you blow it out of proportion in your feeble young mind. That is why, knowing what I know, I wouldn't want my 10 year old in some training situations. It takes a special coach, I think, to be able to work with athletes developmentally before they mature, and I would want to see some sign of that, and would probably prefer them to stay with other 10 year olds even if that means competing L7 or 8 while training other skills. I go back and forth on whether I'd even want my kids in gymnastics. I have some reservations. But nothing in life is perfect and I suppose if they wanted to do it, I'd let them do it.