Practicing Safe Gymnastics
Although it is a sport that celebrates strength, grace, and flexibility among all others, gymnastics can also cause harm and injury to its practitioners if athletes are not fully trained and prepared in its execution. If you are an avid gymnast or just starting to learn about the sport, here are some valuable tips you could follow to keep yourself and others safe and injury-free. First of all, make sure that you are strong enough to handle the moves that you are practicing. Build ample strength first to make it easier and safer to perform the skills you are trying to learn. If you have not developed the strength needed for gymnastics, you will never learn the moves and the skills, no matter how long or how hard you practice. As a matter of fact, there is a great chance that you may just end up hurting yourself. Next, you need to pay attention to what is going all around you. If there are other gymnasts practicing, being aware and paying attention to everyone and everything is a requisite, otherwise you and everybody else will start bumping, crashing, and landing onto each other. Also pay attention to what your coach is saying in order that you will learn faster, more efficiently, and keep yourself safe in the process.
With that said, make sure you don't sit or stand in potential landing or fall zones. Too often gymnasts waiting for their turn do not stay enough out of the way of other gymnasts who need adequate room to dismount or a place to fall. As a result, both athletes get injured. Also watch where you are walking. Nothing is more embarrassing and sometimes painful and dangerous than falling over mats, into pits, over bar cables, etc.
If you need or want some space for practice, don't hesitate to ask for one. You are the one most likely to know and remember if you need a spot or not and it will be too late if you attempt a skill you are not sure of and fall. In the same breath, when you're the one approaching an area, you need to stop and look both ways before you cross or enter to make sure you are not in the way or going to get landed on. Check all your equipment to make sure that everything is set, sturdy, and stable. The handles and cables should be strong and tight enough to ensure your safety when you are on it. Don't assume the equipment is correctly set and tight. Check it and make sure firstNever assume that the equipment has been already checked; you must check it yourself and make sure. Gymnasts should only work out when there is at least one other person around. Gymnastics has its fair share of injury-prone moments; don't become a statistic yourself. Work out only if there's another person around to spot you, most preferably a professional coach or trainer. Spotting requires knowledge, strength and experience that only the professionals have. Asking other gymnasts to spot you could lead to errors in judgment that could result in serious injuries.
Azlan Irda is the co-founder of http://www.aboutballet.com, where you can get high-quality gymnastic mats and other gym equipment. Visit us for all your gymnastic equipment needs.
Published April 2nd, 2007
Filed in Recreation, Sport