- Nov 5, 2013
- 228
- 331
After some advice for when I stop biting my tongue 
I had the pleasure of listening to a CGM at DDs last training session, complaining her daughter hadn't had any attention in the past 10mins, that it was @#$&ing her off and she stormed out the gym.
I couldn't help but laugh.
Why you may ask? Well her daughter is the one who gets the most attention, who purposely makes mistakes so she can get extra turns, who pushes in the front of others to get more attention. Her DD had a meltdown as the HC won't let her compete a move she's not got consistently, burst into tears and stormed off the floor so the HC had to stop everything to deal with this kid. When she did go back and do her floor routine, said CGM was too busy chatting to actually watch what her daughter was doing.
Luckily, I'm not the only parent whose noticed this and we've been joking about timing the one on one training our daughters get vs what this child gets just to prove a point to CGM one day
So how would you deal with this except ignoring them?

I had the pleasure of listening to a CGM at DDs last training session, complaining her daughter hadn't had any attention in the past 10mins, that it was @#$&ing her off and she stormed out the gym.
I couldn't help but laugh.
Why you may ask? Well her daughter is the one who gets the most attention, who purposely makes mistakes so she can get extra turns, who pushes in the front of others to get more attention. Her DD had a meltdown as the HC won't let her compete a move she's not got consistently, burst into tears and stormed off the floor so the HC had to stop everything to deal with this kid. When she did go back and do her floor routine, said CGM was too busy chatting to actually watch what her daughter was doing.
Luckily, I'm not the only parent whose noticed this and we've been joking about timing the one on one training our daughters get vs what this child gets just to prove a point to CGM one day

So how would you deal with this except ignoring them?
