Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She's just 6. Let her try it. If she ever gets to the point where you need to have a conversation about whether she should continue on a competition track, you can have that conversation then.
My 11 year old recently took up diving. A lot of the kids are crossover athletes from gymnastics. The body awareness and moves that it helps kids develop, give them a huge advantage, and those kids make progress incredibly quickly.
This. Gymnastics is a great base for many sports, and it is excellent for athletic development in general. If she is tall, she is not going to be highly competitive at it any way. And it would be a few years before the issues you are concerned with present themselves.
I understand the concern. It’s the reason I wouldn’t want my son to do wrestling even though he is ideally suited for it. (Fortunately, he hasn’t expressed interest to date.) But a few years of gymnastics classes are fundamental (just like play wrestling). And, of course, you can avoid gymnastics and still get the eating disorder….
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is 6 and we've just done two rounds with Silver Stars, the closest option for us. She has always been a tumbler and a climber (furniture, playground, crawled out of her crib at 18 mos.) and it just seemed to be a natural fit. She is tall and muscular. We outgrew Power Tots and wanted to try this as a way to get back in this fall. It is OK. She gets to experiment with all the equipment, and it's physical activity, but she doesn't seem to love it and the instruction and groups don't seem conducive to bonding or friendship, so she doesn't feel the need to continue (I have no clue who the teachers are, or their names, so just a disconnect all-around). She is most excited about learning handstands and cartwheeels... It's so basic at this age, I would give it a shot just to let her get her toes wet? As for us, we're moving on to soccer for spring with a few friends and my plan is to offer up gymnastics once a year if she wants it.
Anonymous wrote:We did gymnastics recreationally and my daughter was so good she was asked to do the team two years in a row. Each time we declined for reasons above. But I have no problem with her doing it recreationally.
Anonymous wrote:She's just 6. Let her try it. If she ever gets to the point where you need to have a conversation about whether she should continue on a competition track, you can have that conversation then.
My 11 year old recently took up diving. A lot of the kids are crossover athletes from gymnastics. The body awareness and moves that it helps kids develop, give them a huge advantage, and those kids make progress incredibly quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Is there any concern over physical development for young children taking gymnastics classes? DD is almost 6 and is interested and my only concern is that if she ends up really liking it and continuing, it would stunt her growth. She’s naturally tall and skinny. Is this not true? Or is this a valid concern? Sorry, I know nothing about gymnastics which is probably evident by this question. I know a couple of adult women who did gymnastics through HS and college and both have the traditional gymnastics body type and experienced infertility….