Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because no one can do anything just for enjoyment anymore. I grew up skiing, and we just . . . skied with our friends, all over the mountain. And then we ate bad food and played video games in the lodge. It wasn't a contest, but it sure was fun.
+1
The lunches of a milky way and a sprite...
But that's another things DC parents can try to brag about too. They are packing their children nutritious almonds...
Anonymous wrote:It’s suchhhhhh a probbbblemmmm. Thank goodness you were able to find a way to tell us about your Second Home in Jackson. Your kids are perfect, you are the perfect parent, and all those mean meanies who let their kids do different things are so horrrrrible!
Anonymous wrote:Because no one can do anything just for enjoyment anymore. I grew up skiing, and we just . . . skied with our friends, all over the mountain. And then we ate bad food and played video games in the lodge. It wasn't a contest, but it sure was fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, we live in a ski town, and all the 7 year olds on our kids’ race teams at that age skied blacks and double blacks. They free skied the whole mountain, hiked the peaks, did most of the terrain park, and were on pace to out ski their parents who didn’t have a racing background by 8 or 9. It’s just the reality of growing up in a mountain town. No one bragged because it’s not special.
DP, but I think that’s the point. Some parents think this is a flex or accomplishment.
Anonymous wrote:Eh, we live in a ski town, and all the 7 year olds on our kids’ race teams at that age skied blacks and double blacks. They free skied the whole mountain, hiked the peaks, did most of the terrain park, and were on pace to out ski their parents who didn’t have a racing background by 8 or 9. It’s just the reality of growing up in a mountain town. No one bragged because it’s not special.
Anonymous wrote:It is definitely a thing. I hear it all the time because I live in park city and every visitor wants to take their kids down a black run so they can say that their kid skis blacks. I’m always ready to name a few approachable black runs for these families and I spare them from mentioning that these “blacks” were actually double blues until several years ago.
It’s just another variation of bragging about two things - their child’s prowess and indirectly, their family’s privilege because skiing is an expensive sport and lifestyle.
Of course, skiing a black run skillfully is not what parents mean when they say their kids “ski blacks”. My kids are average park city skiers. They ski everything in all types of conditions and don’t hesitate to boot pack to better terrain. Some of the their friends are truly extraordinary skiers. They will throw a casual backflip off a jump and ski switch as skillfully as I ski forwards. And I never hear their parents brag about their skiing ability. It’s only something I hear from vacation skiers.