- Jul 22, 2010
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A few months ago, I was at the gym to pick up my DD. A little girl (5-6ish, maybe?) was getting ready to leave and was in trouble with her mom for fooling around during class. The mom was saying something along the lines of, "I know it isn't entirely your fault, and I know you want to keep doing gymnastics..." The little girl chimed in and said, "I NEED to keep doing gymnastics." I laughed and said something along the lines of, "Uh oh. You're in trouble now. My daughter NEEDED to keep doing gymnastics and now she's here 20 hours a week!" Well, did I ever regret starting up that conversation. The mom started spouting, "Well, we just moved here and before we moved, she was on pre team and I TOLD the head coach that she was on pre team, but they're having her do level 2 instead and now she's bored and being disruptive..." and on and on as I tried to find a good excuse to remove myself from the conversation. I guess the lesson here (besides that you need to have the social skills to recognize the difference between a stranger who is just making friendly conversation and someone who really wants to hear your belly-aching) is that "pre-team" means something different at each gym. Pre-team could be anything from level 1 up through level 3 skills. Some pre-teams want kids to come in with a pretty solid skill set, while others will work with any kid who is interested and seems to have some basic natural ability.