Anonymous wrote:It's a huge time (and money) commitment. What I've seen is that if kids stick with it past the first season, they go until the end of eleventh grade. For some reason, all but two that I know have dropped out when they hit senior year of high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is it more of a commitment than other sports? Or does it just seem that way becuase they are so young when the commitment begins?
Mom of a competitive gymnast here. It's a huge time and money commitment. I have friends with kids on travel sports teams and I log more miles on my car, more hours of time and more dollars from my bank account than they do for sure. I spend hours of time each month arranging carpools. There is missed school, which means making up assignments in the already limited free time. During the week, there is virtually no free time between school, practice, homework and chores. Also, it's a year round sport and family vacations end up being to competitions. It's not a sport, it's a lifestyle, if you ask me. And, it goes on for what seems like an endless amount of years since, as you point out, they start young.
How old is your child? What was the commitment like when she first started competing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is it more of a commitment than other sports? Or does it just seem that way becuase they are so young when the commitment begins?
Mom of a competitive gymnast here. It's a huge time and money commitment. I have friends with kids on travel sports teams and I log more miles on my car, more hours of time and more dollars from my bank account than they do for sure. I spend hours of time each month arranging carpools. There is missed school, which means making up assignments in the already limited free time. During the week, there is virtually no free time between school, practice, homework and chores. Also, it's a year round sport and family vacations end up being to competitions. It's not a sport, it's a lifestyle, if you ask me. And, it goes on for what seems like an endless amount of years since, as you point out, they start young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is it more of a commitment than other sports? Or does it just seem that way becuase they are so young when the commitment begins?
Mom of a competitive gymnast here. It's a huge time and money commitment. I have friends with kids on travel sports teams and I log more miles on my car, more hours of time and more dollars from my bank account than they do for sure. I spend hours of time each month arranging carpools. There is missed school, which means making up assignments in the already limited free time. During the week, there is virtually no free time between school, practice, homework and chores. Also, it's a year round sport and family vacations end up being to competitions. It's not a sport, it's a lifestyle, if you ask me. And, it goes on for what seems like an endless amount of years since, as you point out, they start young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is it more of a commitment than other sports? Or does it just seem that way becuase they are so young when the commitment begins?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think anyone but your daughter can answer the question of whether it's worth it. I was a competitive gymnast, and for me, yes, it was absolutely worth it, I loved the sport and still do it (and yes, I'm old and have kids). I stopped competing at 14 and went on to do different high school sports (my high school wasn't very competitive, so I could do any sport they had basically). The strength, flexibility, and body awareness I got from gymnastics made every other sport that much easier to learn, and it also made me appreciate working out and keeping fit. Oh, and yes, it can be a HUGE time commitment at the higher levels. I think the most I worked out was around 25/28 hours a week.
If your daughter is very talented and competitive, stick with USAG. If she wants to do it for fun, then MDL may be a more appropriate venue and could allow for greater longevity with less chance of burnout/injury.
Is it more of a commitment than other sports? Or does it just seem that way becuase they are so young when the commitment begins?
Anonymous wrote:I don't think anyone but your daughter can answer the question of whether it's worth it. I was a competitive gymnast, and for me, yes, it was absolutely worth it, I loved the sport and still do it (and yes, I'm old and have kids). I stopped competing at 14 and went on to do different high school sports (my high school wasn't very competitive, so I could do any sport they had basically). The strength, flexibility, and body awareness I got from gymnastics made every other sport that much easier to learn, and it also made me appreciate working out and keeping fit. Oh, and yes, it can be a HUGE time commitment at the higher levels. I think the most I worked out was around 25/28 hours a week.
If your daughter is very talented and competitive, stick with USAG. If she wants to do it for fun, then MDL may be a more appropriate venue and could allow for greater longevity with less chance of burnout/injury.