Perhaps I am being too emotionally reactive, but in my opinion, you aren‘t being humanistic enough. I don’t suppose it matters anymore since I’ve been pretty vocal already and it’s easy enough to figure out where I live etc, but we are trying to get a brand new gym off the ground over here. We are doing just what you suggest we should do in our capitalist market society. It’s quickly going in the direction of the same old-same old over here, and we would like to know what we could do to make this better (a whole different thread).Ok, so it's the MOST difficult sport, what is your point? Youre tilting at windmills here. You cant force universities to add programs, and this is a free society so even the most educated, most aware individuals are still going to pursue this sport or any sport for that matter to the nth degree. I understand, you are in an underserved area, but this is a capitalist market society, you can open your own gym, or move to a market that supports a more robust gymnastics scene. But its obvious that the market in your area only supports so much.
So one individual had a daughter quit training elite? We are going to extrapolate everything out of a N=1? Do you just want to have a b*tching session? I just don't understand where you are trying to take this?
I think there is much more than an N of 1. I thought one of the issues being discussed was how to retain elites in the elite program. There is a larger problem than an N of 1.