- Jun 27, 2017
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- 693
DD being out, again, with her third bout of wrist pain, and her orthopedist telling us that if she doesn't really heal from this, we might have to consider that her body/hands just might not be made for this sport got me thinking.
Back when she was L4 and loving life, I was convinced she would be that girl who would go to L10. I never thought she'd go Elite, or even attempt the college track, just that she would stick it out because she loved it so much. Always wanted to go to the gym, was always doing skills at home, begging for more and at that time she was doing 16 hours, so while it wasn't 20+, it was still pretty consequential.
Three significant breaks (nose, hand, foot), three bouts of wrist inflammation, and various small injuries later, she has now missed at least a full year of training, and I fundamentally believe she will NEVER go to 10. She's lost her fire. She still loves it, but she's not so sure it loves her back.
All a long prelude to asking - what perspective have you gained from the journey of your daughter (or son)? Is there anything you would have done differently?
1. I would have made her wear supports after her first bout, daughter and coaches be damned.
2. I would rather she had done L5 for the basics, and not L6.
But things I don't regret. She was invited to TOPs. She tried it and hated it and dropped out. I used to wonder if that was a mistake or not. Looking back, it was just right for her (and her wrists) as well as our family. I'm grateful she didn't go there.
Curious to hear everyone's thoughts.
Back when she was L4 and loving life, I was convinced she would be that girl who would go to L10. I never thought she'd go Elite, or even attempt the college track, just that she would stick it out because she loved it so much. Always wanted to go to the gym, was always doing skills at home, begging for more and at that time she was doing 16 hours, so while it wasn't 20+, it was still pretty consequential.
Three significant breaks (nose, hand, foot), three bouts of wrist inflammation, and various small injuries later, she has now missed at least a full year of training, and I fundamentally believe she will NEVER go to 10. She's lost her fire. She still loves it, but she's not so sure it loves her back.
All a long prelude to asking - what perspective have you gained from the journey of your daughter (or son)? Is there anything you would have done differently?
1. I would have made her wear supports after her first bout, daughter and coaches be damned.
2. I would rather she had done L5 for the basics, and not L6.
But things I don't regret. She was invited to TOPs. She tried it and hated it and dropped out. I used to wonder if that was a mistake or not. Looking back, it was just right for her (and her wrists) as well as our family. I'm grateful she didn't go there.
Curious to hear everyone's thoughts.