It's a long way to go, and no one knows where any individual child will be at mile 5, 10, 15, 22 of this marathon. Last year, I was the owner and operator of the slowest/least skilled child and the fastest/most skilled child in their respective practice groups. The same may be true in two years with the children reversed. Any parent whose child stays in long enough will get served a large helping of humble pie at some point, and I think that at a good gym, any parent whose child can stick it out through the rough part of the road will have a chance to cheer.
Over the years I've seen some parents who were very invested in who was placing where and getting which skills faster than others, even to the point of fretting over rotation orders. I'd like to say that this diminishes over time, but I was just talking to the mother of a L8 over the weekend who said there's still a good bit of that carp going on in her daughter's practice group. My feeling is that I feel better about myself and my own children if I practice what I preach to them -- it's all about their own progress on their own time line, and any time anyone makes a new skill, it's a good thing for the whole team. And trust me, it's a whole lot easier for the gymboys and gymgirls if they feel like they're all in this together and they support each other through the rough patches, whoever might be in one at any given moment.
Think of it this way. Long-term stays in this sport give our kids the unusual opportunity to learn to be both great winners and losers, because no one's going to rock every meet and no one's going to stink up every meet. If I do everything I can to walk away from the pettiness and cheer wholeheartedly for EVERY gymnast on EVERY skill, I'm a better parent and my children are better teammates.
Cbone, can you find it in yourself to empathize with the mom whose daughter is struggling with her kip? If you can, I guarantee you 100% you will appreciate the payback when it's your daughter's turn to struggle.