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#1
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Skater's Isolation
I have only been skating for 17 months, usually 3 or 4 days a week - up at 4 a.m., skate 7 to 9, hold down a full-time job (9 to 3:30) and maintain a household (3:30 to bedtime around 9 p.m.). Except for my dog, all my contacts are on the ice (very brief) or with coworkers (job related and brief) and I have drifted apart from most of my friends (except my neighbours and some folks I have lunch with on Saturdays). Most of my skating friends are as busy as I am so we seldom have time to socialize off the ice.
It occurred to me this morning that figure skating is quite an isolating activity and also takes a lot of time (which is limited) and energy (which is also limited). I know that most of you have families but, for those who don't, has skating effected your social life? How do you avoid becoming a skating hermit?
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Dianne (A.O.S.S.? Got it BAD! ![]() |
#2
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I agree that most of my interactions are brief- with a friend on the ice, a short chat with a coworker. But I have a simple solution for you to fit more time with your friends in- let the household go! LOL
The times that you skate don't interfer with normal "social" hours- so I guess the only thing you have to battle with is getting enough sleep in. If you really wanted to see people, you'd push bed time back until 10:00 once in a while, so you can go out to dinner or what not. You know? I am about to start a skating everyday routine, but I've left Wednesday free- for a stamping clubs I am a part of. That's my socialization. If I join syncrho I'll have to rearrange my schedule, as it meets Wednesday night. But, I do plan to make sure I keep that in there. I'm naturally a hermit, but sometimes when I realize how long its been since I seen people I get really depressed.
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-Jessi What I need is a montage... Visit my skating journal or my Youtube videos (updated with 2 new videos Sept 26, 2009) |
#3
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I've made great long term friends from skating, even though many do not skate anymore! I don't feel isolated at all. I have friends at the rink, and do socialize with them, friends on line and get to meet them once in a while, and friends outside of skating. It's all about balance. Also if you're in this long enough you'll go changes as to how much you skate, your focus and your priorities. For me skating is a great part of my life, but my life is not just skating.
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Recycle Love - Adopt a homeless pet |
#4
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Well I know what you mean.. I get up at 5, skate 6-8:30, then work till 5 or 6 or later as required! You're very lucky you finish work at 3:30. Then I have to go home and study as I have hardcore exams to work for alongside work... and that is likely to last 5-7 years if I pass them all first time which only 3% of people do!
But I love my time on ice, and I have made some really good friends through it so I figure the rest of my friends will have to learn to live with it! ![]()
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The hardest thing about ice skating is the ice. |
#5
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You mean there are social implications for a skating adult?
![]() I know what you mean though. I can't talk about it much at work because it would be "unprofessional", so I keep progress reports and disasters mostly to this board. Even S.O. doesn't know what I'm talking about half the time although she politely asks how things went on occasion. I do have a couple "skating buddies" at our local rink, but the rink is closed now for the summer. That limits my opportunity to chat with them about their own progress. I have started sharpening the skates of a couple skaters who get to travel to Columbus weekly for practice. Even so, the arrangements are done via email and skates are dropped off and picked up without seeing the skaters in person. I must say that my progress and setbacks are mostly discussed here. That bothers me a little...not that this is a bad place to hang out, but because it's serving as a substitute for actual human interaction. Finally I'll say that the adult skaters at my local ROLLER rink are a MUCH more social group of people. Just this past Friday they had a birthday & anniversary skating party for one couple and everybody brought pot luck food for the event. Skating stopped half-way through so that a group photo could be made. These are skaters who are mostly older than I am (and I'm 57!), and many of them had to travel a couple of hours to skate.
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Bill Schneider |
#6
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Unfortunately, the only only friends I see often are now just the friends I skate with. Every other Saturday or so, I have time to get together with a friend, but of course I have to choose among them. I usually decide which one based on how much interest she/he has expressed in hearing about my skating!
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"You don't have to put an age limit on your dreams." - Dara Torres, 41, after her 2nd medal at the 2008 Olympics |
#7
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I am not particularly comfortable with social interaction, so the loneliness of the long term skater is not a problem to me. Those friends and colleagues who know of my skating, regard it as a symptom of early onset senility ...
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UK Passport (figure) Bronze : PASSED 13-Oct-07 Woohoo Silver: PASSED 08-Dec-07 Yippee Gold: Backspin PASSED One Foot Spin ____ Toe Loop ____ Programme ____ The impossible is just a journey away ... |
#8
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I used to have 4+3 job which means 4 days away from home, 1 day in home office, 2 days off. Of those 2 days I would spend about half of the time at the rink and the other half trying to catch on some sleep and packing bags for the next 4 days at the overseas office. I'm totally used to having 98% of my social live digitalized (web, chats, forums etc.), but what does amaze me is how I still stay married.
To my long-suffering husband: ![]() ![]() ![]()
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My other car is a Zamboni |
#9
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It is hard to skate frequently and hold down a full-time job at the same time. I do agree that I had to skate and rest most weekends instead of catching up with my old buddies from High School and such.
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Tim David's Website ![]() |
#10
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I find that I enjoy the "isolation" of skating after a day at work. Mind you, I am on the phone to people, or training them all day long! I wouldn't say that I feel the isolation in my life though - but then again, I don't have a husband or children, so all my free time is really my own to catch up with friends.
And my friends love to come with me occasionally, for an informal 'lesson', which I always really enjoy. It makes a nice change to skate with a friend every once in a while.
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Amanda "If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance . . . " My Skating Journal |
#11
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Same here
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Tim David's Website ![]() |
#12
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Quote:
I really don't know what the answer is except to either cancel sleeping each night or make do with what you have. I enjoy the company of my workmates and skating pals and make the most of the solitude in the house during the evenings. |
#13
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Quote:
There really is a choice to be made. Mine is how much sleep I can do without. I pick generally one night a week and time on weekends, in which I will be available for socializing. My friends know and understand this and they make accommodations. Those that don't understand they just won't see me as much. It does make it quite hard to find a boyfriend with my schedule, I must say!
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"Without a struggle, there can be no progress" ~ Frederick Douglass |
#14
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Quote:
For almost 15 years I had the best full-time job -- I worked from 10:30am-6:30pm, so I was able to skate at a decent hour before work and still be able to do stuff at night without worrying about having to get up too early the next morning. Unfortunately, I was laid off in a merger last summer, and my new job's hours are 9am-6pm ... and it's about 50 minutes away from the rink. So I am having trouble fitting the skating in -- I have to get up at 5am to skate, and that means going to bed really early ... TOO EARLY. For me, anyway! In my world, that's totally unacceptable -- so I'm looking for a new job! Skating is pretty much my social life, though, so I don't really miss things like going to clubs, etc. I am a die-hard music fan, so I do squeeze in my share of concerts, but overall I think I have a good balance in my life. If skating is important enough to you, you won't miss the other stuff! |
#15
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I have become socially inept because of figure skating. Seriously! If I'm not talking skating, I'm at a loss for words...it's pathetic, really, but I wouldn't trade it for the world!
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#16
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Well I am so glad that it isn't just me. My family is starting to resent the idea of me skating because of how much of my time it consumes. (Especially my Dad) I never had an abundance of friends but a majority of my current friends are skaters at my rink. I don't even chat with my best friend as much as I should. My coach and I, are becoming really close because I see him more than anyone else in my life right now. No time for a girlfriend so I don't waste time looking for one. I work at night from 2 PM to 11PM Mon-Fri so I skate in the morning from 7-8:30 am every day and I hit the gym right after that. I'm also fitting in yoga, pilates, and personal training now. Other than the money I set aside for savings, I spend the rest on necessary bills and skating. I am starting to experience a little burnout, so I am taking some money aside to go on a much needed vacation next month for my 25th B-Day. Yay!!! But my other social activities are on the backburner.
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Proud to be one of the few black men out on the ice ![]() Goals Pass my Silver Moves Test Finish Choreography for Silver Program Land a Clean Double Toe and Double Lutz Work on Double Axel and Rockers Speed up back Camel |
#17
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It's true that skating takes a lot of time - I realized when I broke my foot and could basically do NOTHING for 3 weeks how much time I was spending skating and how much money I was spending as well. Yikes - nothing like a little fracture to put it all into perspective.
I think it was worse in the days of figures - those really took a lot of time and were very isolating for the skater as they had to be done very methodically and there was absolutely no talking on the ice when there was a figure session! (and the coaches would basically whisper the instructions). I think this is why a lot of young girls would eventually quit skating in their mid-teens - they felt that they were lingering away at an ice rink and their friends were out there having fun. The kids at least in my area have it good, as most of them have made a lot of friends in skating and they like to go to practices where they will see their friends, etc. It has taken me years to come to a point in my career that I can afford to work part-time and I work around my skating schedule. I think it takes some creativity to do so and there are lots of sacrifices - for me I think I have found a good balance between home, work, skating, judging, husband, pets and a spiritual life. Too bad my body is giving out and skating is just skating at this point now that I have figured out how to fit it in!
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Is Portland the only city with it's own ice-dance website? http://www.pdxicedance.net/ |
#18
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Um, I figured that many people would experience some "social ramifications" to skating seriously.
I am happy with the balance (or lack thereof) in my life at this point in time and I am sort of stuck with it until somebody invents 48 hour days or I retire (in a year and a bit). When I started and thought I was "just" skating recreationally, I skated with some other adults and there was more chit-chat on-ice. When I got bit by the adult competition bug and moved to a "competitive training centre", the other skaters are young enough to be my grandchildren and everybody is very focused on their training so conversations are quite short. I did quite skating weekends at that point primarily to spend some time with other adults ![]() As others have said, the skating boards have become my primary social outlet - at least in places like this we can find people who understand our obsession!
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Dianne (A.O.S.S.? Got it BAD! ![]() |
#19
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I feel lucky in that I've met a whole bunch of friends through skating; our rink is pretty social, I'm the sort of person who doesn't make friends easily and I feel I've had fewer problems 'fitting in' with rink friends than in many other situations. It could probably be said that skating is partly responsible for ending my marriage. Not really because of the time I spend at the rink, but because skating has given me new-found confidence to strike out on my own and believe that I have the 'right' to be happy.
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There is a very fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness" |
#20
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I'm not in much demand for a social life, and that hasn't changed since I've started skating. Pretty much the only thing that's changed is that I now feel more confident in my fitness level and appearance than I ever have in my life. |
#21
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Don't you find that our solitary sport also makes you more comfortable being alone too? I'm my own good company most of the time and I like it.
Lyle |
#22
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I think a lot of adult skaters, maybe even all serious skaters, are loners by nature. Rusty, maybe you could turn this into a poll about the basic "social" personalities of adult skaters. I think it would be an interesting poll.
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#23
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I haven't lost my social life (except for moving to a state where I know nobody), but, I am sure there are people in my life who think I've gone crazy because they don't understand that adults skate. No mattew how much I tell them I don't compete against the 12 year olds. For example I think my ex boyfriend, still a good friend, is starting to worry about my AOSS. Or he's just sick of hearing about it. He used to find my interest in skating intriguing, but I suspect he wonders why at 40ish I'm still doing it. He hasn't seen adult skating though.
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Revised Official 2010 Goals checklist Skate __ New boots __ (lowering the bar for 2010 as I haven't skated in a year) |
#24
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One more thing- I find that avid golfers totally understand!!! I compare skating to golf all the time - competing against others but mainly yourself, mastering laws of physics, tendency to live and breath the sport. I used to work with a guy who was high up in management of the USGA. I told him my theories of comparing skating to golf and it TOTALLY got it. His entire office is covered in golf stuff.
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Revised Official 2010 Goals checklist Skate __ New boots __ (lowering the bar for 2010 as I haven't skated in a year) |
#25
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I didn't have a social life before skating, now I sorta do... My grades suffered, of course.
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