{"id":2225,"date":"2018-01-29T06:41:57","date_gmt":"2018-01-29T06:41:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/gymnasticsville.com\/?p=2225"},"modified":"2018-01-29T17:07:24","modified_gmt":"2018-01-29T17:07:24","slug":"usa-gymnastics-america-another-point-view-taqiy-abdullah-simmons","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gymnasticsville.com\/usa-gymnastics-america-another-point-view-taqiy-abdullah-simmons\/","title":{"rendered":"USA Gymnastics in America Another Point of View | Taqiy Abdullah-Simmons"},"content":{"rendered":"
I am ready to join the conversation in a way that is more than saying I support all the victims of Larry Nassar, in what is now being considered the worst abuse scandal in American sports history.<\/p>\n
It goes without question for those that know me that I truly care about the happiness of others, what we offer to the success of others, and the happiness we can spread by being our best selves to those that we encounter. So believe me when I say that I support all the women and children who were abused. Some of these women I know, and I just wanted to share my support and wish you continued strength and healing.<\/p>\n I love gymnastics. I love what it has done for my life and what I have been able to experience because of my ability to flip. Gymnastics was a tool that I used to better my life and has been a driving factor of why I am where I am today as a person.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s get to it, I know people in the community were upset about the Sports Illustrated<\/a> article titled “American gymnastics is no longer a sport. It’s a conspiracy of pedophiles and their enablers. And every coward who enabled serial abuser Larry Nassar deserves to pay.” In first reaction, I was like agh you’re wrong, but then I stopped and started to think. I generally try to understand the other side of situations so I can better understand why one would view something and so therefore I am not quick to judge. And after doing that, I don’t think this is a far fetched title. We have a SERIOUS PROBLEM in AMERICAN GYMNASTICS.<\/p>\n In the headline it says “No Longer a Sport”. In the eyes of everyone outside the Gymnastics community before the abused became international news, American Gymnastics had been viewed as a super hard sport – one that the common person couldn’t understand, and American Women were amazing at. Women’s gymnastics was the Sport. It was a women’s sport. And all the males out there know that if you grew up as a gymnast, at some point you would get made fun of for it. So again, Gymnastics in America was Women’s gymnastics. And now with the scandal, the outside community in the foreseeable future will now assume that most female gymnasts could have suffered abuse in some shape or form. I’m sure female gymnasts have been asked more than ever, did this stuff happen to you? And for that, I feel horrible for my sport. But that is what American gymnastics is known for presently. The outside community for the foreseeable future will associate gymnastics with abuse. So YES, we have lost our sport to ABUSE.<\/p>\n But can we change the past? NO. Everyone needs to be held accountable for the state in which the sport is in now. EVERYONE including myself. I can no longer stay idle and not speak about the issues.<\/p>\n To the Women’s gymnastics community, being at your club meets as a coach made me uncomfortable too many times. Not for me being a male, but for some of the situations I witnessed while coaching at meets. I obviously grew up doing men’s gymnastics and that’s all I knew until I started coaching women’s club gymnastics shortly after leaving college. During my 4 seasons as a women coach I had coached girls from levels 2-10, and I have to say my overall experience of it was one that I did not love. I saw too many times girls being belittled, shunned, yelled at, and doing gymnastics that was far outside of their gymnastics range or development. And obviously this was not every coach or every club by any means, but it was too frequent to not think the sport had some serious cultural issues.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
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