- Mar 23, 2010
- 6,670
- 20,430
- Moderator
- #76
Heads down, thumbs up
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I could shimmy this a million times. THIS is exactly why I sit in front of the window at (almost) every practice. People can poke fun about it all they want. I'm not ashamed of it at all. I love watching my girls every second they're out on the floor. And they love that I'm there watching them.... But I will be there. Every possible moment that I can. For every skill, for every fall, for every smile, for every second that they love this, and for every second they don't.
If their child doesn't put in the effort you still are and you should be paid for being a professional coach and treated accordingly by the child and parent. Personally I would love to afford private lessons even every once in a while. I am blessed that my kids are good at learning skills quick during their tumbling session - love their coach and wish I had the money for even semi privates. Very frustrating to those moms who realize that time and money both have value and to watch other parents throw it around and then treat coaches like they are their own personal babysitters.
I am a coach and a mom and I push my child more. But she loves the sport and wants to improve. She is also a club soccer player. I've had advise to chose one sport or the other and since she's only 9 years old I think she needs to be able to be well rounded. Her soccer and her cheer in some ways compliment each other. Soccer gives her that endurance so she can perform 2:30 with ease and her cheer gives her that confidence, strength, and speed. She loves both so I see no reason to focus on just one. Since I'm a former cheer owner i would be heart broken if she chose soccer over cheer LOL ... but in the end she is very well rounded and a straight A student ....
I understand what you're saying, but speaking only for my child, we did have to choose. She came to this sport 3 years ago not even knowing how to do a round off, after playing travel softball since she was 5. It was only supposed to be an intro tumble class during a 2 month softball break.
We did both the first two years, but it did get to the point that we had to make a decision. Not just for her- but for her teammates. It was not fair to her teams for her to miss practices, ballgames, or competitions. We make a 3 hour round trip drive to cheer and it doesn't leave a lot of time to do other things. Even if we were close by, there would still be problems.
We pay so much money to do this, and I will admit that it really ruffles my feathers when we can't practice stunts or the pyramid because the same kids repeatedly miss practices because they want to play volleyball, do school cheer, be on the track team, try out for drama, etc. You know the amount of commitment it takes when you sign up for this very expensive sport. In my opinion, if you can't fulfill that commitment to your team, you shouldn't sign up.
I realize that is probably not what you're talking about- if your kid is able to do multiple sports without missing practices, games, or competitions, then I think that is great and should be encouraged. It has just never worked out that way for the cheer teams we've been on. There is always conflict. And it almost always drives our coaches insane.
Sorry for the mini-rant. Nothing personal and I didn't mean this to be aimed at you. I'm mainly just griping about some of the parents/kids in our gym lol. :)
I hope she gets use to it ... I also have to drag along my almost 2 yr old sonBeen there done that! :) It's not nearly as hard as you'd think. Good luck!
I agree totally. I was a gym owner now "JUST" a cheer mom (such an understatement). But I always tried to keep costs down and its just plain hard to do. Also, I was the passionate gym owner that would give out scholarships to those in need of help (mostly lower level kids). I ended up selling my gym to friends who in turn never paid me and again being a good friend gave them time to get the money together (now 4 years later). I basically gave away my gym for FREE.I have been watching this thread but didn't feel the need to comment until someone mentioned the fact that there is a lot of cheer parents out there that have no idea what other families go through to participate in this sport. That is why I am such a HUGE proponent for making cheer accessible to all kids and not just the select few that can pay for it. I personally think the price of this sport is out of control. For example choreography...a team of 27 girls pays $250 each...that is roughly $6700. For choreography that more than likely will be changed three months into the season. I know our gym gets the choreographer for one day so that guy is making over $2000/hr!! This to me is ridiculous.
We don't do regular privates either, my cp missed her banquet because we couldn't do that and pay for tryouts/practice clothes. I worked two jobs for years until I got injured and was told I couldn't do it anymore. Now my dh inspects foreclosed homes a few times a week to help pay for it. I just wish gyms out there would realize that for every Southlake/Plano mom that comes in and slaps down her gold card there is 10 of us moving heaven and earth for our child to be on their floor.
I especially can't stand this idea that not only should I be shelling out my life savings but I should pull up to the curb, drop my child and come back in 2 hours. No other sport have I seen this kind of attitude towards parents. My 8 year old has done select soccer and little league and I have never been told I have to wait in my car, and I pay them a fraction of what I pay for cheer.
My opinion is...as a coach or owner you signed up for this. Cheer parents have always had their "crazy apples" so when you started your gym you knew that you might have to deal with some of them. If you think they are so out of control then close your practice.
I hope she gets use to it ... I also have to drag along my almost 2 yr old son
I just wish gyms out there would realize that for every Southlake/Plano mom that comes in and slaps down her gold card there is 10 of us moving heaven and earth for our child to be on their floor.
I especially can't stand this idea that not only should I be shelling out my life savings but I should pull up to the curb, drop my child and come back in 2 hours.