
A long time ago Reader Lys asked me about doing gymnastics in the gym. A long long time ago Reader Sally asked me for more stories about my days as a gymnast. A long long long time ago everyone who knows in me in real life asked me to never speak of gymnastics again as it is one of those stories that manages to be very boring despite having a lot of gore (broken bones! snapped necks!! team-wide PMS!!!) and shiny costumes. But thanks to the miracle of the Internet I have a collection of hilarious gymnastic pictures and videos that need sharing so badly they're threatening to pop out of my computer like a red thong under white bike shorts (you know who you are) so today's all about the gymnastics.

My non-brilliance started with my size. Even though I was a twee 5'3" at the time, that's freakishly tall for a gymnast leading judges to give me comments like "I love her long lines... but she lands heavy." and "She's very graceful... except when she falls and gets flustered." and my favorite "She has perfect vault legs." Masters of the backhanded compliments, they were.


Despite the title of this video, it is not in the least bit funny.
This one, though, I must admit is as hilarious as it is frightening:
Anyhow, you don't just fall, like on beam or bars, or step out of bounds, like on floor. Oh no, you screw up on vault and you're the middle car in a six-car pile-up on the highway. You crash. I remember watching a girl in my gym miss her vault during practice and literally snap her neck. I heard the pop all the way across the gym. She lived, thankfully, but was in a neck brace for months. By the time it had healed, she'd decided not to return to the team. And so it was in that moment right after I'd signaled to the judges and right before I took that first step that my heart would seize up in my chest. If I made my vault it was total relief that I had survived to compete on something I really enjoyed doing (albeit badly) and if I missed... well, I never had a bad miss.
What I did instead was broke my foot. I snagged my toe on the low bar during a simple transition to the high bar and broke it all the way up my foot. My toe was literally perpendicular
to my foot. And yet I didn't want a cast or anything else incapacitating because then I wouldn't be able to compete. So we had it set and taped it. I rebroke it two weeks later on a hard landing on the beam. Reset. Retape. And then two weeks later did it again. But this time I did it by dropping a container of flour on it while making cookies. My mother, completely fed up by this point, set my foot on the kitchen table. At my next meet, all I could think about on vault was my bones slipping out of gear in my foot and sending me flying to my death. I quit the team.

I did, however, continue to dabble in the sport just for kicks and giggles. So Reader Lys' question is one I have often contemplated myself. When you talk about doing a gymnastics workout, you have two options:
1. Actually doing tricks. This requires apparatus like fiberglass uneven bars and a gymnastics floor with 2 feet of springs and foam padding (you all do know that the Olympic gymastic floor is like one gigantic springboard right??). Unless you actually workout in a gymnastic facility these items are hard to come by. I don't recommend improvising, like say kipping on the chin-up bar. The Y actually removed our chin-up bar and part of me suspects it had a lot to do with me hanging by my knees and cherry dropping off of it.

For those of you interested in incoporating some gymnastics moves into your strength routines, here are some resources:
- An Olympic hopeful takes Women's Health through a conditioning workout. (I'd start with this one.)
- The Gymnastics Workout of the Day gives you something new every day. (Do note that it's a site for male gymnasts so they say things like "hold parallel for 3 seconds and then press to handstand." Uh huh.
- Beast skills offers guided tutorials of some of the skills (again, men's gymnastics). My fave was the "no-handed one-arm chin-up." Eek.
Other options are doing basic skills like handstands, cartwheels, walkovers (front and back) and other tricks that don't require a spot or a equipment.
I know a lot of you out there are ex-gymnasts - what are your fave gymnastics-inspired workout moves? For you non-gymnasts, you don't have to have done it to appreciate the humor! Here's one last funny video for you:
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