#1
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Some Skaters!
Dont you find that just some skaters are soooooooooooooo cocky?
Especially when they are at a higher level than you and are older! i dont know why but i am really really angry at this and that is because the coaches see it and never do anything! Ithink it should be stopped because it is like a form of bullying! what do you think/ |
#2
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If the skaters aren't doing or saying anything to you it's not quite a form of bullying. People with a higher confidence level aren't nessecarily (sp :S) cocky. Don't let it bother you pretend like you don't even notice it ,if it is bothering you so much, because if people don't listen to them they probably will stop.
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beks~ "winning isn't everything... wanting to is." " the only place where success comes before work is in a dictionary" "It’s not necessarily the amount of time you spend at pracitce that counts; it's what you put into the practice." |
#3
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IMO you sometimes need a cocky attitude to be a champion. hat doesn't mean you have to put down other people, but creating an atmosphere around you that says "im a champion" boosts confidence and leads others to believe that the person is confident.
If the person is bad talking others and going around saying" im the best" one day someone is going to come along and kick her a**. Just remember, you might be the best in your club, region, are,a etc, but someone out there will always be better than you!!! |
#4
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A "champion" doesn't need a cocky attitude. They do need to feel confident in themselves. Confidence doesn't equal a bad attitude. In fact a real champion has a positive attitude towards themselves AND others. From my experience folks with respect for all rink mates are "champions".
Chico
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"I truly believe, when God created skating, he patted himself on the back." |
#5
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Quote:
I have also found that some coaches, unfortuately, don't just disregard the bad behaviour but positively encourage it! I'm just grateful that the good kids vastly outnumber the bratty ones x
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The best whisper is a click
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#6
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Yes, I've only met one champion skater who was what you might call "cocky" - and we teased him out of it. The adults just banded together and he was like, "I'm so-and-so...." and we were like, "So what?" And by the time he moved on, as he eventually did, he was just one of us.
All the rest of our elite kids are very nice people, even if one of them did throw a grape at me this morning. I was off the ice at the time, I hasten to add. But that's the kind of relationship we have with each other. Sometimes the teachers have fusses with each other, and accuse each other of trying to own the ice, but we skaters stay out of that!
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Mrs Redboots ~~~~~~~~ I love my computer because my friends live in it! Ice dancers have lovely big curves! |
#7
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I'm not saying you have to be "cocky", exactly, to be a champion...You just have to have confidence. Our club's coaches actually want us to be cocky, in order to gain more of that theatrical quality. It's the same way with our Thespian Troupe. The coach wants us to be cocky.
I'd like to say that I'm not cocky; that's something my private coach hates. She says I need to get out there more, and have more of an attitude. Sometimes, just sometimes, the judges like people to be cocky. It's a little odd, yes, but as long as it doesn't get extreme, the people that know you don't really care. I suggest that perhaps you try talking to the girl at your rink, and try to get to know her better, or at least be on civil terms with each other. There's nothing worse than a full-blown skater fight. They can get pretty dangerous with those blades.
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Instant burglar...just add pants! Pants? Well, it took him five hours to find them. Really. Yes, really. You should have stuck with Gloria Mundi. Then you couldn't make crude jokes. Sure I...wait, how was that crude? --My muse and me |
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