- Jun 29, 2008
- 106
- 27
Hi everyone. I don't think I've posted on this board before
.
A little history... I used to be a gym owner/instructor, but I closed last April. My gym started out gymnastics and turned cheerleading as I lost all of my equipment in a move and there was a higher demand for all star cheer. I was originally located inside a YWCA and they went under and all of my equipment basically became property of their liquidation, even though I had paid for some of it with a car accident settlement and the rest I busted my butt fundraising for. Anyway, that was years ago. I relocated and couldn't afford equipment beyond mats.
I never forced my daughter to do cheerleading or tumbling as I didn't want to be one of 'those coaches'. I wanted her to do it if she showed interest. Last year when she turned 6 she began to show interest and she started taking classes 1 day per week. She has little natural talent and struggled with nearly everything but she enjoyed it and worked really hard. Other parents were sort of turned off by it as they felt the 'owner's daughter' would be amazing I guess and it not only put me in a rough spot but her as well.
Anyway, I closed and she begged me a few weeks ago to try gymnastics so I signed her up at a nice gym with a reputable program. Now you must know that my daughter has an overwhelming amount of fear when it comes to many things in her life. Unfortunately she has dealt with a lot death at a very young age. Her 2 brothers (my sons) passed away. Her aunt (not much older than me) died a couple months ago and Grandma died less than a year ago. After dealing with all of this death she has a lot more fear than most children her age and please don't suggest counseling as it's not in my budget and not covered by insurance and they want $140/hour. Other than the fear, she is a perfectly normal child and is exceptionally bright for her age.
She had her first gymnastics class yesterday and she didn't do too bad. She was fine with floor tumbling and fine on low beams. High beams she was not very cooperative and bars was a nightmare. She wouldn't even pick up her feet to do a tuck, pike, or straddle swing and wasn't thrilled about doing a pullover. Her coach was really good with her and held her through everything and basically made her do it, but in a positive encouraging way. When class was over, I asked her how she liked it and she said "It was GREAT!" with a lot of enthusiasm. I asked her if she wanted to go back next week and she said "Yes". I've tried talking to her about her a fear a few times this week and she says she is just scared to do certain things.
So should I keep taking her to gymnastics in hopes it may build her confidence and help her conquer all of this fear? I'm used to the little ones being fearless, not full of fear.
Has anyone else experienced this with their little ones?

A little history... I used to be a gym owner/instructor, but I closed last April. My gym started out gymnastics and turned cheerleading as I lost all of my equipment in a move and there was a higher demand for all star cheer. I was originally located inside a YWCA and they went under and all of my equipment basically became property of their liquidation, even though I had paid for some of it with a car accident settlement and the rest I busted my butt fundraising for. Anyway, that was years ago. I relocated and couldn't afford equipment beyond mats.
I never forced my daughter to do cheerleading or tumbling as I didn't want to be one of 'those coaches'. I wanted her to do it if she showed interest. Last year when she turned 6 she began to show interest and she started taking classes 1 day per week. She has little natural talent and struggled with nearly everything but she enjoyed it and worked really hard. Other parents were sort of turned off by it as they felt the 'owner's daughter' would be amazing I guess and it not only put me in a rough spot but her as well.
Anyway, I closed and she begged me a few weeks ago to try gymnastics so I signed her up at a nice gym with a reputable program. Now you must know that my daughter has an overwhelming amount of fear when it comes to many things in her life. Unfortunately she has dealt with a lot death at a very young age. Her 2 brothers (my sons) passed away. Her aunt (not much older than me) died a couple months ago and Grandma died less than a year ago. After dealing with all of this death she has a lot more fear than most children her age and please don't suggest counseling as it's not in my budget and not covered by insurance and they want $140/hour. Other than the fear, she is a perfectly normal child and is exceptionally bright for her age.
She had her first gymnastics class yesterday and she didn't do too bad. She was fine with floor tumbling and fine on low beams. High beams she was not very cooperative and bars was a nightmare. She wouldn't even pick up her feet to do a tuck, pike, or straddle swing and wasn't thrilled about doing a pullover. Her coach was really good with her and held her through everything and basically made her do it, but in a positive encouraging way. When class was over, I asked her how she liked it and she said "It was GREAT!" with a lot of enthusiasm. I asked her if she wanted to go back next week and she said "Yes". I've tried talking to her about her a fear a few times this week and she says she is just scared to do certain things.
So should I keep taking her to gymnastics in hopes it may build her confidence and help her conquer all of this fear? I'm used to the little ones being fearless, not full of fear.
Has anyone else experienced this with their little ones?