Anonymous wrote:These make me a bit sad for girls. I had no eye hand or eye foot coordination, didn't enjoy the repetitive nature of swimming but was a damn good dancer then figure skater then cheerleader (I did all 3 over the years and cheered in college). I took absolute JOY in moving to music and had both a natural talent for it and love for it that made me work hard to build my skill.
I never once was body shamed in it or felt I had to be skinnier for my activity (vs the general be skinny pressure on girls). Maybe I would have been if I was at very high elite levels, but aren't all high elite athletes under body pressure whether its strength or weight or whatever. I am naturally petite which helped me with cheer and skating but that was no different than being naturally tall helping for basketball or tall and lean helping for cross country.
I just makes me sad that parents wouldn't let their kids do an activity out of potential future fears that gave me and many others such joy. I've circled back on all them in my adult life (just started taking skating lessons again after a 25 year hiatus) and I get energized from it in a way i never have any other physical or artistic persuit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never in a million years, would I allow DD to become an empty-headed, vapid, cheerleader.
This + poms
I think Poms is most popular down South and the Midwest. Have you seen the Pom teams and dance teams in the D1 college division? They are remarkably talented. Watch videos from some of their competitions and explain why you have a problem with it. These girls are not super thin. For the most part their weight is right where it’s supposed to be and they are strong.
Just like female sports teams there are mediocre dance teams but the top Pom teams are on par with the colleges top sports team with regard to the work put in and the results.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so interesting! My DD does competitive gymnastics. At her gym it’s a very healthy culture. I steered her away from lacrosse (nasty mean girl stuff in our town and where I grew up) and she pulled away from soccer at a young age (also because of mean girl/aloha girl drama). Swimming had a bunch of over involved tiger parents in our area and that put her off, but somehow tennis where I live is weirdly supportive and collegial.
It’s fascinating how some activities have a culture of their own depending on where you live. We’re not in the dmv and some sport cultures are very different from the stereotypes I remember from growing up. And some are the same, cough cough, boys’ lacrosse.
Lacrosse is really rapey in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:This is so interesting! My DD does competitive gymnastics. At her gym it’s a very healthy culture. I steered her away from lacrosse (nasty mean girl stuff in our town and where I grew up) and she pulled away from soccer at a young age (also because of mean girl/aloha girl drama). Swimming had a bunch of over involved tiger parents in our area and that put her off, but somehow tennis where I live is weirdly supportive and collegial.
It’s fascinating how some activities have a culture of their own depending on where you live. We’re not in the dmv and some sport cultures are very different from the stereotypes I remember from growing up. And some are the same, cough cough, boys’ lacrosse.
Anonymous wrote:No gymnastics,
no competitive swimming,
no cheerleading,
no boxing,
no football,
no racing,
no spelling bee!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so interesting! My DD does competitive gymnastics. At her gym it’s a very healthy culture. I steered her away from lacrosse (nasty mean girl stuff in our town and where I grew up) and she pulled away from soccer at a young age (also because of mean girl/aloha girl drama). Swimming had a bunch of over involved tiger parents in our area and that put her off, but somehow tennis where I live is weirdly supportive and collegial.
It’s fascinating how some activities have a culture of their own depending on where you live. We’re not in the dmv and some sport cultures are very different from the stereotypes I remember from growing up. And some are the same, cough cough, boys’ lacrosse.
Ok, I get the mean girl reference in your comment, but for the life of me, what's an aloha girl? I'm thinking grass shirts, leis and coconuts, but that can't be it?
Anonymous wrote:This is so interesting! My DD does competitive gymnastics. At her gym it’s a very healthy culture. I steered her away from lacrosse (nasty mean girl stuff in our town and where I grew up) and she pulled away from soccer at a young age (also because of mean girl/aloha girl drama). Swimming had a bunch of over involved tiger parents in our area and that put her off, but somehow tennis where I live is weirdly supportive and collegial.
It’s fascinating how some activities have a culture of their own depending on where you live. We’re not in the dmv and some sport cultures are very different from the stereotypes I remember from growing up. And some are the same, cough cough, boys’ lacrosse.