Page 1 of 1 [ 16 posts ] 

AnniPierrot
Deinonychus
Deinonychus

User avatar

Joined: 7 Apr 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Female
Posts: 308

05 May 2013, 2:35 am

Does anyone watch/do figure skating?
I did figure skating for 7 years before having to quit because I was moving to England.
I still watch a lot of figure skating on tv though, and I'm planning on taking it back up in the summer because I'll have 3 months of holiday.
Favourite figure skaters: Yuzuru Hanyu (he's a few months younger than me and has already mastered the quad jump!) and Yuna Kim (South Korea's Ice Queen. Who doesn't love her?) :)


_________________
Your Aspie score: 187 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 30 of 200
You are very likely an Aspie


OliveOilMom
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 11 Nov 2011
Age: 61
Gender: Female
Posts: 11,447
Location: About 50 miles past the middle of nowhere

05 May 2013, 2:48 am

I can't skate to save my life, but I used to love to watch figure skating when I was younger. Back in the 70's I wanted to be Dorothy Hammill and I had that haircut for years. I used to try and get my mother to take me to the skating rink so I could learn but she never would. When I got older and tried to roller skate I figured out that I just can't do that at all.

I also used to love watching gymnastics. I remember Nadia Komineche (sp?) the Romanian gymnast from the Olympics. Mid 70's. I wanted to do gymnastics too but never did.

It always used to seem to me (and still does, really) that those two sports have a lot in common.


_________________
I'm giving it another shot. We will see.
My forum is still there and everyone is welcome to come join as well. There is a private women only subforum there if anyone is interested. Also, there is no CAPTCHA. ;-)

The link to the forum is http://www.rightplanet.proboards.com


1000Knives
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2011
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,036
Location: CT, USA

05 May 2013, 3:18 am

I do.

It's been pretty much a lifesaver for me. When I started I had high blood pressure and weighed 210-215lbs, within 4 months great blood pressure and weighed 180. I've been skating for about 2 years now. Started in rental hockey skates, now worked up to very nice stiff Edeas. My biggest is problem is I'm relatively uncoached. I've made a lot of progress all things considered, the only 3 turns I have left to work on are the back insides really, but I might have done better with a coach. My plan right now is just to get really good edging and footwork learned before concentrating on jumps and spinning. The person closest to my coach told me of people who try to jump and spin straight away without concentrating on doing edging "are putting themselves on the fast track to mediocrity." Plus all the edging and turns are relatively simple to learn on your own.

What I do also is I do lots of weightlifting, specifically the training lifts you'd do for Olympic style weightlifting, and I do plyometric jumping and whatnot too. Basically my planning was, while I work on my edging by myself, also work on my power in that fashion, then when it comes time to do jumps, I'll already be very powerful and explosive. One lady who gives me form checks and advice asked if I was a gymnast when I was younger. She wondered where I got my relatively good power and flexibility. Another coach who didn't know me from my back in my idiot days in hockey skates messing around who'd never seen me before told me, rather shockingly to me, that he thinks I have enough power to do triples.

In my case, I'm really blessed with almost free ice time. My gym membership is really cheap, it's $10 a month in my family plan, and it includes my gym and all the public ice time in the price (without a family membership, when I started, it was $27.) Eventually I'll need the more expensive freestyle ice, but yeah. I can't say not having a coach and being really broke and sloppy and disorganized like I am is good, but I've made the best of it I guess.

Lastly, besides the physical benefits, it's a good mental hobby for me. I have NVLD and the dyspraxia that goes with it, so I'm really uncoordinated. It's helped my coordination and visual spatial skills immensely. But I think more importantly, it gives a good outlet for my feelings I can't really express due to my alexithymia. That and it's like, uh, "soft" and really good for me, it's much more how I actually feel. I'm the type 9 times out of 10 that'd rather listen to girly eurodance or something compared to metal or rock.

I guess with skating, what really attracted me to it was the power aspect of it. Not just jumping, but I remember clopping around on my hockey skates like an idiot down the ice, and then having a 100lb girl just FLY past me. To me it like, seemed like the most powerful sport around. It had speed, power, and finesse, things I love. I love sportscars and racing for that reason, too. So for a sport it's perfect. It's a sensation almost like flying. It's great.

I really don't keep track of or know much about pro figure skating to be honest. If I had to pick a favorite skater, it'd have to be Midori Ito of the 80s. When she was younger, she had just lots of energy and seemed to be having lots of fun. But she had a LOT of power, I think she was the first woman to ever do a triple axel. I guess again with the power thing... For males, I dunno, Brian Boitano, again, because he seems like a powerful skater to me. I also liked Patrick Chan's program for 2012's ISU Championships. He seems to be a very nice and smooth skater, which I also like. There's a male Russian pair skater who coaches now at my rink who skated at the ISU worlds level, and I find him pretty admirable. We've got another ISU junior champ who skates at my rink, too, and a few National level skaters from Europe, too.

What else, I didn't really skate as a kid. I had like 8 weeks or something of LTS hockey as a kid, but my parents couldn't send me to play real hockey due to lack of money. I think I went to 3-4 birthday parties or whatever ice skating. It just so happened after high school, I lived within 3 miles of the rink I went to for the LTS hockey, and just decided to try ice skating again one day, and I just kept coming.



AnniPierrot
Deinonychus
Deinonychus

User avatar

Joined: 7 Apr 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Female
Posts: 308

05 May 2013, 5:42 am

1000Knives wrote:
I do.

It's been pretty much a lifesaver for me. When I started I had high blood pressure and weighed 210-215lbs, within 4 months great blood pressure and weighed 180. I've been skating for about 2 years now. Started in rental hockey skates, now worked up to very nice stiff Edeas. My biggest is problem is I'm relatively uncoached. I've made a lot of progress all things considered, the only 3 turns I have left to work on are the back insides really, but I might have done better with a coach. My plan right now is just to get really good edging and footwork learned before concentrating on jumps and spinning. The person closest to my coach told me of people who try to jump and spin straight away without concentrating on doing edging "are putting themselves on the fast track to mediocrity." Plus all the edging and turns are relatively simple to learn on your own.

What I do also is I do lots of weightlifting, specifically the training lifts you'd do for Olympic style weightlifting, and I do plyometric jumping and whatnot too. Basically my planning was, while I work on my edging by myself, also work on my power in that fashion, then when it comes time to do jumps, I'll already be very powerful and explosive. One lady who gives me form checks and advice asked if I was a gymnast when I was younger. She wondered where I got my relatively good power and flexibility. Another coach who didn't know me from my back in my idiot days in hockey skates messing around who'd never seen me before told me, rather shockingly to me, that he thinks I have enough power to do triples.

In my case, I'm really blessed with almost free ice time. My gym membership is really cheap, it's $10 a month in my family plan, and it includes my gym and all the public ice time in the price (without a family membership, when I started, it was $27.) Eventually I'll need the more expensive freestyle ice, but yeah. I can't say not having a coach and being really broke and sloppy and disorganized like I am is good, but I've made the best of it I guess.

Lastly, besides the physical benefits, it's a good mental hobby for me. I have NVLD and the dyspraxia that goes with it, so I'm really uncoordinated. It's helped my coordination and visual spatial skills immensely. But I think more importantly, it gives a good outlet for my feelings I can't really express due to my alexithymia. That and it's like, uh, "soft" and really good for me, it's much more how I actually feel. I'm the type 9 times out of 10 that'd rather listen to girly eurodance or something compared to metal or rock.

I guess with skating, what really attracted me to it was the power aspect of it. Not just jumping, but I remember clopping around on my hockey skates like an idiot down the ice, and then having a 100lb girl just FLY past me. To me it like, seemed like the most powerful sport around. It had speed, power, and finesse, things I love. I love sportscars and racing for that reason, too. So for a sport it's perfect. It's a sensation almost like flying. It's great.

I really don't keep track of or know much about pro figure skating to be honest. If I had to pick a favorite skater, it'd have to be Midori Ito of the 80s. When she was younger, she had just lots of energy and seemed to be having lots of fun. But she had a LOT of power, I think she was the first woman to ever do a triple axel. I guess again with the power thing... For males, I dunno, Brian Boitano, again, because he seems like a powerful skater to me. I also liked Patrick Chan's program for 2012's ISU Championships. He seems to be a very nice and smooth skater, which I also like. There's a male Russian pair skater who coaches now at my rink who skated at the ISU worlds level, and I find him pretty admirable. We've got another ISU junior champ who skates at my rink, too, and a few National level skaters from Europe, too.

What else, I didn't really skate as a kid. I had like 8 weeks or something of LTS hockey as a kid, but my parents couldn't send me to play real hockey due to lack of money. I think I went to 3-4 birthday parties or whatever ice skating. It just so happened after high school, I lived within 3 miles of the rink I went to for the LTS hockey, and just decided to try ice skating again one day, and I just kept coming.


Midori Ito is awesome :D
I love the speeds you can achieve when you skate! I used to play "it" with my brother at the ice rink when we were little. He never wins :P


_________________
Your Aspie score: 187 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 30 of 200
You are very likely an Aspie


1000Knives
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2011
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,036
Location: CT, USA

09 May 2013, 10:56 am

What level did you get up to before you quit?



PDBowden
Butterfly
Butterfly

User avatar

Joined: 28 Apr 2013
Age: 38
Gender: Male
Posts: 11

10 May 2013, 2:18 pm

AnniPierrot wrote:
Does anyone watch/do figure skating?
I did figure skating for 7 years before having to quit because I was moving to England.
I still watch a lot of figure skating on tv though, and I'm planning on taking it back up in the summer because I'll have 3 months of holiday.
Favourite figure skaters: Yuzuru Hanyu (he's a few months younger than me and has already mastered the quad jump!) and Yuna Kim (South Korea's Ice Queen. Who doesn't love her?) :)


It'll help improve your coordination and balance a lot.



AnniPierrot
Deinonychus
Deinonychus

User avatar

Joined: 7 Apr 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Female
Posts: 308

10 May 2013, 2:25 pm

I have no idea what level I got up to but I was going to be in some sort of competition until I had to quit :(


_________________
Your Aspie score: 187 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 30 of 200
You are very likely an Aspie


1000Knives
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2011
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,036
Location: CT, USA

10 May 2013, 2:29 pm

AnniPierrot wrote:
I have no idea what level I got up to but I was going to be in some sort of competition until I had to quit :(


Ah, I think I'm either Bronze or Pre-Bronze MITF right now. Free skate I still suck as I can't spin and can't jump besides waltz jump. Oddly my spirals and lunges are good, which is odd for a guy, I apparently have good flexibility for a guy? :?

For me my strategy is a bit different than most. I'm perfectly content spending ALL my time doing edging and turns until they're perfect, and then working on spins and jumps later. My old "coach" basically explained edging was the foundation. So if I spend my time building a very solid edging foundation, the rest of my skating will be much better.

I kinda learned this from another guy as crazy as myself. But crazier. He's older than me, he started skating, got a coach, the coach had him skating in circles. He thought it was boring, fired the coach, and decided he just wanted to jump. So now he can actually do doubles, but his actual skating isn't good at all, and his jumps looked screwy. When I first started skating, I thought he looked pretty good on the ice, but now I can see his issues a lot more. He said now (about 1.5 years after meeting him) I have better crossovers than he does, too. So I took him as a big warning.



AnniPierrot
Deinonychus
Deinonychus

User avatar

Joined: 7 Apr 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Female
Posts: 308

10 May 2013, 2:34 pm

1000Knives wrote:
AnniPierrot wrote:
I have no idea what level I got up to but I was going to be in some sort of competition until I had to quit :(


Ah, I think I'm either Bronze or Pre-Bronze MITF right now. Free skate I still suck as I can't spin. Oddly my spirals and lunges are good, which is odd for a guy, I apparently have good flexibility for a guy? :?


Ah I was probably Bronze.
Ooh nice, my brother and I started at the same time and he was crap at basically everything :P Good for you!!


_________________
Your Aspie score: 187 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 30 of 200
You are very likely an Aspie


luvsterriers
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 2 Sep 2009
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,159
Location: Fairfax, VA

18 May 2013, 10:37 am

I used to like to watch Scott Hamilton. I liked to see him do the backwards flips. I get nervous while watching figure skating even though I'm not the one skating. I can't ice skate at all. I'm afraid I may fall down.


_________________
Anna

If you're not happy with yourself, you'll never be happy with somebody else. (Don Omar)


1000Knives
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2011
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,036
Location: CT, USA

18 May 2013, 10:39 am

luvsterriers wrote:
I used to like to watch Scott Hamilton. I liked to see him do the backwards flips. I get nervous while watching figure skating even though I'm not the one skating. I can't ice skate at all. I'm afraid I may fall down.


I fall probably 2x a week now. I should be falling everyday multiple times.



kx250rider
Supporting Member
Supporting Member

User avatar

Joined: 15 May 2010
Age: 57
Gender: Male
Posts: 2,140
Location: Dallas, TX & Somis, CA

18 May 2013, 10:47 am

I will deny having written this, as it's not something that straight men usually have done... But I learned and was OK at it when I was 10 or 12 years old. Since it's so shunned for straight boys & men to figure skate, I never pursued it further. I probably wouldn't have been expert at it ever, but I was OK.

Charles



1000Knives
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Jul 2011
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,036
Location: CT, USA

18 May 2013, 11:10 am

kx250rider wrote:
I will deny having written this, as it's not something that straight men usually have done... But I learned and was OK at it when I was 10 or 12 years old. Since it's so shunned for straight boys & men to figure skate, I never pursued it further. I probably wouldn't have been expert at it ever, but I was OK.

Charles


The older I get, I think the less I care about how other people perceive me. Or at least not in the same ways as I did in high school. Not everything has to be me being mega ultra badass and extreme all the time.

I also listen to Michelle Branch and Vanessa Carlton now, even though I'd not be caught dead listening to them in high school.

What's anyone gonna do about it?

Anyway, good job for trying, though. I wish I got into it at that age instead of 20.



leftyspinner
Butterfly
Butterfly

User avatar

Joined: 21 Mar 2014
Age: 50
Gender: Female
Posts: 11
Location: Minneapolis area, Minnesota, U.S.A.

14 Apr 2014, 1:49 am

OK, I can't do a lutz yet, but klutz doesn't rhyme with salchow. Anyway, the point is that I was extremely clumsy and uncoordinated for most of my life, but figure skating lessons have helped me gain physical control and balance and even know where my arms and legs are without looking at them. Six years ago, I couldn't stand on one foot without holding onto a counter or something. Now I have nice edges and can do some little jumps and spins. I have passed Adult Pre-Bronze Moves in the Field and Free Skate. This week I was in an ice show and and did OK despite severe anxiety and a hurt knee from a fall in dress rehearsal. I am tall, chubby and 39, but I love to skate. Favorite skaters; Johnny Weir, Jeremy Abbott, Yuna Kim, Mao Asada, anyone who spins and jumps clockwise.


_________________
People talk about "thinking outside the box." I can't even SEE the box.


Moomingirl
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Mar 2013
Age: 50
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,084
Location: away with the fairies

14 Apr 2014, 3:03 am

I did figure skating for about a year, but I lack the natural grace and elegance needed. So I started playing hockey instead. :P I'm not much better at that, but at least I get less frustrated with myself.

I still love to watch figure skating though. When I was a kid the ice dancers Torvill and Dean were winning everything. They were awesome.



LupaLuna
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jan 2013
Age: 54
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,551
Location: tri-cities WA

22 Apr 2014, 10:35 am

kx250rider wrote:
I will deny having written this, as it's not something that straight men usually have done... But I learned and was OK at it when I was 10 or 12 years old. Since it's so shunned for straight boys & men to figure skate, I never pursued it further. I probably wouldn't have been expert at it ever, but I was OK.

Charles


I was gonna say, I grew up in the 1980's when gay bashing was at it peek and I saw men figure skate all the time on TV. heck, there where men doing ballet and as far as I know. I had never seen any gender discrimination in ether of those area and mind you, this was back in the 1980's