USA Gymnastics shares the Top 10 moments from 2012
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4 Things I learned from Matt’s Dog JACOBY
I try to be an easygoing person. Some have even described me as laid back. But like many, when things went wrong, it can be tough to recover from. Some coping skills just aren’t effective, unless you consider drowning your sorrows in bottles of wine and pans of brownies healthy. When things don’t go my way or my expectations weren’t met, I can feel desperately inept at holding myself together.
I wait for my life to change–for things to start going my way. And that’s when I finally realize that life doesn’t work that way. It doesn’t simply go the way you want it to, no matter how much you wish or pray about it, and even sometimes no matter how hard you work at it. More often than not, life is simply hard. You don’t often get what you want, and many feel they don’t get what they deserve. We just get what we get. It’s how we cope with it, embrace it, and learn from it that makes us whole or broken.
Once I realized this, it was a slow awakening. I didn’t simply understand one day and wake up changed. Just like the reality of the alarm clock in the morning, I tried to deny it. I hit snooze. Pulled the covers over my head. Chased the last bits of darkness and dreams. But eventually, as is always true, I had to wake up and live my life.
Funnily enough, I took my cues on changing the way I lived from one of my employees and friend dog Jacoby. After all, He is happy all the time, so who better to look to for ways to live life? So I started to live like Jacoby.
1. Embrace the morning.
I hear that every morning, Jacoby wakes up happy and realized there’s no reason I can’t, too. He’s always snuggly and wagging and excited that it’s a new day. Instead of waking each morning and wishing my life were different, I decided to wake up thinking of it as a new beginning. No matter what has happened the day before, the morning is always a new opportunity—to change your attitude, your mood, your mind. That was a decision I had to make, a practice to put into play. I talked myself through it everyday until I didn’t need reminders anymore. Now, I awake to stretch my limbs, get some good snuggles, and go outside for some fresh air. Each morning, regardless of whether it’s cold outside or I’m especially sleepy, is a fresh start.
2. Use your senses.
During competition season I have to walk Jacoby every once and a while. Every time I walk him, he’s constantly sniffing, listening, alert. I realized that I never paid attention to my surroundings. I was always too busy brooding—looking at my feet or my phone or just lost in negative thoughts. Now, I’m present in each moment of my day. I look up at the sky to notice its blueness and the way the clouds stretch across the horizon. I take deep breaths, inhale the crisp winter air, and give thanks. I listen to the last of the leaves crunching underfoot, and cuddle into the softness of my scarf. It makes me grateful for the small things.
3. Sing!
Let me preface this by telling you: I am not a singer. But, Jacoby absolutely adores it when I sing. He wags his whole body when I sing to him. I sing The Ramones, Greenday and James Taylor and butcher every last lyric and note. But guess what? It makes him—and me—happy. You can’t belt out Bohemian Rhapsody and stay in a bad mood. It’s a scientific fact. Ok, maybe not, but it’s true for me.
4. Show affection.
No matter what has happened in his day, Jacoby is always glad to see Matt. He wags. He jumps. He gives kisses and cuddles. He even cuddles up to me when I come over and sit on the couch and he tries to sit on my lap (No easy feat as he is nearly as big as me). While his affection doesn’t exactly translate into my world, I take a cue from him by smiling at people on the street, saying good morning, holding doors open, and paying compliments to friends and strangers alike. Not surprisingly, it makes me feel good to make others feel good.
How does this translate into resilience? Well, I’m a happier person. Not because I have the perfect job or family or friends (and I DO). Not because I have loads of money or amazing Car (I DON’T). I’m happier because I’m grateful. I realize that for all the things I don’t have in my life, there are hundreds, maybe even thousands, more to appreciate. When things don’t go the way I’d hoped, it doesn’t destroy me because I can recognize that there’s so much I have that is good, and there are so many reasons to be happy. I allow myself to feel sad or hurt or angry, but it doesn’t consume me. I feel it, and then I move on from it. I can see the bigger picture and realize that these are all small moments in a much greater scene. Rather than pursuing happiness, I’m just letting myself be happy.
Sometimes Jacoby come to the gym to help us with Vaulting
12 things to do before the Mayan Apocalypse
- Do you believe that the Mayan Apocalypse is upon us?
- Are you fully convinced that, in a scant 12 days, whatever Vague Disastrous Thing the Mayans predicted will finally occur?
- Are you giving serious thought to heading to the top of Mount Pic De Bugarach, as some French people are, so you can be rescued by aliens?
Then you absolutely must do the following, right now, using the time you have left.
12. Buy Apocalypse supplies! On the recommended shopping list are canned food, bunkers and flares to summon aliens to rescue you. When the Apocalypse comes, it will announce itself to you so you can make it downstairs to the shelter in time, can opener in tow, and when the aliens arrive they will translate the fact that you are shooting fire into the air in their general direction as a sign that they should come help you. This makes a lot of sense, so you should buy all these things.
11. Buy merchandise advertising your awareness and preparedness for the Mayan Apocalypse, preferably a T-shirt or bumper sticker that says, “Mayan-Apocalypse Ready.” This will show your friends, neighbors and business associates just the kind of person you are!
10. Tell all your friends and family members about the coming Apocalypse. When they suggest that the world has never ended before, shake your head knowingly and reply, “That’s what they said the last time, and look what happened.” Point out that the Mayan Apocalypse is one of the few remaining apocalyptic predictions that has NOT been disproven.
9. Throw a human sacrifice to appease the Mayan gods. Start with Donald Trump.
8. Quit your job, and don’t be shy about stating the reason. The world is ending in 12 days. Who needs a job? Answer: Lots and lots of twenty-somethings, currently living in their parents’ basements. Let us at least perish with the knowledge that we were gainfully employed. It would mean a lot to us.
7. Stop bathing. Who has time to bathe? The world is ending! You have lots and lots of other bucket-list items to finish, and you should focus on those. If anyone comments on the smell, tell them that “when the aliens come, we’ll be lucky to smell at all.” Point them to your T-shirt.
6. Get a tattoo that reads, “BIG BELIEVER IN THE MAYAN APOCALYPSE,” preferably somewhere tasteful, like your face or neck. The Mayans, I hear from the same reliable source who told me about the flares, will give preferential treatment to people with face tattoos showing how ready they were.
5. Call Mitt Romney. He’s going through a rough time. Like the Mayan Apocalypse, he is something people believed was “inevitable” for a long time, but that a lot of voters were not particularly enthused about. And maybe his inevitable presidency starts Dec. 22, after our alien overlords arrive.
4. See “Les Miserables.” The world might be ending, but that’s no reason Anne Hathaway’s career should suffer!
3. Find someone you think is attractive but could not stand to live with for any length of time, and marry him or her. What’s the harm? When you say, “I will love you ’til the end of time,” you’re talking a matter of hours, after all.
2. Demand that every restaurant/coffee shop/mall/assorted public place currently blasting “Little Drummer Boy” or any equally obnoxious Christmas music cease and desist, right now. You have minutes to live. You should not have to spend them listening to someone inanely repeat “Rum pa pum pum.” You have enough regrets to deal with.
1. Give me all your money, right now. What do you care for money? The Apocalypse is at hand! Embrace your children. Embrace your new spouse. Put out a Craigslist ad for sensual companionship. I don’t care. My point is, your possessions are holding you back. Give me the key to your house. Enjoy the time you have left. Give me your car. Squeeze each fleeting moment to the dregs. Put your kids in the care of someone more responsible. Love, laugh, live!
AND FOR ALL MY GYMNASTS- HOW ABOUT GOING FOR ALL THOSE SKILLS WE HAVE BEEN PLAYING WITH!
Heck, this goes for believers in the Rapture too.
Crash Of The Week. Blind Change Gone Wrong
This is what happens when you duck your head on a blind change.
How to Deal with a Bad Week
According to my daughter, “This week, so far, has sucked.”
Yesterday, she cracked the screen of her phone for the third time this year. she broke her favorite sunglasses today, and a malevolent bird decided to relieve itself on the windshield of her car. Later, she decided to cheer herself up with her favorite smoothie, only to spill nearly all of it down the front or her shirt once she got home. All of these unfortunate events, compounded with the fact that she is doing much more poorly in her favorite class than I would like. This week it is enough to make her feel like a walking Murphy’s Law. While these events may not seem very significant or even that bad, they have made for an absolutely miserable week in the life of this melodramatic teenager.
Usually, if this string of events were to happen, she’d react with the typical teenage quick fix: mope and whine and make angsty tweets about her misfortune. This approach, while cathartic, is not a very healthy way to deal with the effects of a bad week. So this time, I have not let her unhappiness get the better of me, and I have come up with three key ways to help her keep her cool.
1) Gratitude. If you stop for a moment and force yourself to feel genuinely thankful for everything you DO have in your life, the small problems will seem even smaller.
2) Unwind. Cooking always helps me calm down, so I bought her a box of Ghirardelli double chocolate brownie mix today. Even if you still feel badly afterwards, at least you now have a batch of delicious brownies.
3) Laugh at yourself. I mean, it just gets comical eventually. You trip and fall on your face, realize you forgot your homework at home, spill all of your lunch on the ground, get a terrible grade on a test… After a certain point, it seems like you’re starring in a remake of “Just My Luck,” except Chris Pine isn’t your boyfriend.
The bottom line is that we all have bad days. There is always a day where everything goes completely against your will, and you can’t help it. But we all have good days as well. What makes the biggest difference is staying levelheaded and keeping perspective, so that you don’t lose sight of those good days that already happened and the ones that are to come. I’ll end with a quote from the wise Lemony Snicket, who wrote, “At times, the world may seem an unfriendly and sinister place, but believe that there is much more good in it than bad. All you have to do is look hard enough.” So look hard!
Crash of the Week, TEAM MIKEY’S WAY
Ian Makowske competing and raising money for TEAM MIKEY’S WAY has a pretty spectacular peel while training high bar.
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University of Illinois Men’s Gymnastics Pre-Season Highlights
University of Illinois Men’s Gymnastics Pre-season High Lights!
Crash of the Week. Vault Drill Gone Wrong
One of my favorite drills for learning how to flip vault is to have the gymnasts do a “timer” up to mats and then flip off into the resi. We recently purchased the new Level 4 vault system from Mancino. It is pretty cool because it comes as CUBES. (two, 5×5 cubes that velcro together. 5×10, 8 inch mat that goes on top).
Sometimes, the drills do not work out the way we intended.
Happy Birthday Coach Jamie
Happy Birthday to Gym Momentum Staff member COACH JAMIE DONKIN from Utah!
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Team building activities and challenges for children
Team Building Activities and Challenges for Children
Addie Kiley, Atlantic Gymnastics. akiley87@gmail.com
As you hear often team effort, is one of the key elements for any successful venture. Ice breaking games are designed to break barriers and bring people closer among team members. A well designed icebreaker or challenge is motivating, energizing, and establishes solid team rapport. Games, challenges, and activities encourage kids to laugh and be silly together while minimizing the fear of “being laughed at” [Read more…]