I echo many of the sentiments expressed in this thread. I, too, was one to be picked last for softball, I was afraid of climbing ropes and the like, was afraid of getting hit by the ball in ball games, I was clumsy and not particularly strong or agile. What I did enjoy in gym class, were the running trials; Cooper tests and the likes, which tested speed and stamina. I was better at sprinting short distances than lasting a lot of laps, though. At the school I attended in the last two years of primary school, physical education was very poor, it had been reduced to a weekly match of softball. In those days, I had the reputation of being a jinx for whatever team I ended up on. I kid you not when I say that - but for twice in two years - every team I was on would simply lose. I guess I set back the team because I was so unskilled, bad at batting and not good at calculating when would be a good time to run.
I'll also say that it's even worse to be bad at football in the Netherlands than it may be in other countries, particularly countries where foot ball isn't that popular. Here in the Netherlands, football is about the only sport that has credible Dutch representation in international sports. This is why about 80 percent of all boys in Dutch schools are actually in a (semi-professional) football club; those who do not enjoy football, like me, are kind of viewed as weird. It also means that, when I was in a particularly good humour in my last year of secondary school, and decided to just enjoy the football game we had to play then, I was unable to enjoy it, because almost everybody else had years of practice in football, and I simply didn't stand a chance against them. It was unfair.
devey wrote:
Am I the only one who loved PE?
I do find it a bit surprising that so many on the spectrum seem to be bad at PE or didn't enjoy it. Though I can recognise myself in the general geeky/nerdy nature that's common among us, I would not immediately have assumed that we're most of us clumsy, or physically inept. But perhaps those on the spectrum who WERE good at PE and are more athletic than the average, aren't the ones who regularly visit internet forums.
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