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We were not working front hip circles and aerials at the same time. She learned her front hip circle and mill circle on her home bar and worked her giants after DH bolted the bar to the basement floor.
We were not working front hip circles and aerials at the same time. She learned her front hip circle and mill circle on her home bar and worked her giants after DH bolted the bar to the basement floor.
I know what an aerial is. We watched a progression for it on youtube. She got it on trampoline, then in the back yard before we ever took it to the beam. She can land it some of the time with one or two feet on the beam so I know she will get it soon. She is very determined and doesn't give up until she gets a skill. We put lots of pillows around to make sure she doesn't run into anything if she misses.
We were not working front hip circles and aerials at the same time. She learned her front hip circle and mill circle on her home bar and worked her giants after DH bolted the bar to the basement floor.
I know what an aerial is. We watched a progression for it on youtube. She got it on trampoline, then in the back yard before we ever took it to the beam. She can land it some of the time with one or two feet on the beam so I know she will get it soon. She is very determined and doesn't give up until she gets a skill. We put lots of pillows around to make sure she doesn't run into anything if she misses.
Gymnastics is different because in basketball, soccer, and baseball no one is deducting points for performing a skill incorrectly. When you are shooting free throws, no one cares if you are shooting them underhand like Rick Barry if you can make over 80%. (Actually, Rick Barry's career free throw percentage was 89.98%.) In basketball and soccer, improvisation is an essential element of learning and play, whereas improvisation is antithetical to gymnastics, especially compulsory.Something I find interesting......
Parents put up basketball goals to help their kids practice free throws. Parents buy soccer goals to help their kids practice goal kicks. Parents buy special gear to help their kids learn how to connect a bal with a bat.
As far as I know these parents don't get their parenting skills called into question. I wonder why if parents buy their kids floor beams or junior kip bars, it isn't met with the same attitude as a way to help our kids perfect their skills in a sport they enjoy.
Bella plays soccer and no one has ever accused me of living my unmet soccer goals through my daughter when I buy her a practice ball and a home soccer goal. No one tells me how unlikely it is that my daughter will ever play in the World Cup or quotes me statistics on how many soccer players there are in the ranks compared to those who "make it."
Why is gymnastics SO different? It is the oddest phenomenon and one I find absolutely fascinating. So far gymnastics is the only activity where my support of my daughter's interest and talent is seen as something "crazy."
Gymnastics is different because in basketball, soccer, and baseball no one is deducting points for performing a skill incorrectly. When you are shooting free throws, no one cares if you are shooting them underhand like Rick Barry if you can make over 80%. (Actually, Rick Barry's career free throw percentage was 89.98%.) In basketball and soccer, improvisation is an essential element of learning and play, whereas improvisation is antithetical to gymnastics, especially compulsory.
Frankly, if all the feedback from the coaches here talking about how difficult it is to unlearn badly-practiced skills isn't enough of a deterrent, I don't know what is. Ditto with the safety concerns.
As the father of an elite/collegiate gymnast, let me add this. As your child advances levels, he or she will need home to become a sanctuary AWAY from gymnastics, especially as his or her hours increase. Don't burn out your child with home equipment.
You say "WE were not working front hip circles..." Are you her coach? Do you have coaching experience? Are you a former gymnast? I am so confused by you.
I'm not trying to speak for anyone but I did want to say that I don't find this kind of language a cause for alarm. I speak in the plural with my daughter too. I often say that we are having lunch even if she is the one eating and I'm doing something else. I say that we are taking a bath when she is in the bathtub and I'm cleaning up after dinner. I say that we are at gymnastics and that we are on the beam.
It MIGHT just be the way FutureEliteMom speaks when she is speaking about her daughter.
We were not working front hip circles and aerials at the same time. She learned her front hip circle and mill circle on her home bar and worked her giants after DH bolted the bar to the basement floor.
I know what an aerial is. We watched a progression for it on youtube. She got it on trampoline, then in the back yard before we ever took it to the beam. She can land it some of the time with one or two feet on the beam so I know she will get it soon. She is very determined and doesn't give up until she gets a skill. We put lots of pillows around to make sure she doesn't run into anything if she misses.
My daughter is not 5, she is 9. She is doing mostly baby giant-push-away- progression to giants. She showed the coaches what she had been working on for beam and they told her good job. They did tell say she should perfect her cartwheel to roundoff before working more on the ariel. At this point I don't feel comfortable posting any more about what she is working on. This place is quick to judge.