Women Consistency issues -meet jitters

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Has anyone found that any sort of online doc ali type service (I'm not sure what this is called) is helpful for meet jitters/consistency issues? DD is very much prone to doing horribly on one event per meet. She has been known to drop nearly 2 full points on any given event at a meet while improving on all others. In our area we have a minimum score needed to qualify for states. There is no reason why she cannot qualify other than this inconsistency issue -she has shown that she can do well on each event just can't seem to pull them all together at the same meet. Any suggestions? She is level 3.
 
Take the pressure off. It will come in time. Meets don't really matter at this level. Remind her that the only consequences for a meet are good ones -- if you do well, you can get a medal. Nothing bad can happen as a consequence of having a meet go poorly. Some kids (all the way up to Aly Raisman) have a lot of success by telling themselves to do "normal, just like in practice" at a meet.
 
With Short Stack, we talk on the way to the meet. Scores do not come into the discussion when she tells me one or two small goals she has for each apparatus (ex. Have straight arms on my kip, hold the handstand the full time, run faster on vault). Perhaps this might help your daughter--focusing on one or two things that SHE wants to achieve. Having those goals on her mind might take her mind off her nerves.
 
Time and experience helps more than anything. My dd had awful meet jitters her first two seasons. If she had one bad event, she would get very upset and let it essentially ruin the rest of the meet for her (every apparatus after that would also be bad.) It took almost two seasons to get over it. The end of her 2nd season and her 3rd season were great. She just had to get used to competing and to be able to relax and enjoy the time with her teammates in between events. Laughing and talking with teammates instead of stressing in between events seemed to be the key for her. She needed that distraction so she didn't psych herself out. She also learned that if she did have a mistake or fall, to just roll with it and try to make it up on the next event.
 

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