PM_Mama00 |
09-16-2010 04:31 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by 33girl
(Post 1984443)
As I've said....why are 6 year olds cheerleaders at all??
Yes, I know cheerleading is a legitimate sport, but that isn't what these girls are doing. These girls (and their moms shoving them into it) are thinking of the "all cheerleaders are popular" concept. It's ridiculous to have that kind of thing so young, and with approval by the parents. $125 for a uniform??? Seriously??
Put your un-uniformed kids in a meadow and just let them play kickball, for crying out loud.
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Little league football and cheering is pretty big around here. And $125 is nothing compared to the other sports. My parents paid about the same when I played tennis at that age. Before I played competitively, they forked out about $1000 between lessons, uniform, new racquet, new tennis shoes, etc.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
(Post 1984447)
It's pretty much the same cheer that everyone in my high school knew in the 70s (except this current version messes up the meter):
My back is achin', my skirt's/shirt's too tight,
My bottom's/body's shakin' from the left to the right. Meanwhile, co-sign 33-girl.
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The little leaguers when I was that age did
"My back aches, my skirt's too tight, my hips shake from left to right. Uh! Engowa (no clue wtf that means) give me some of that Pirate power!"
But I don't think young girls were as sexualized back then as they are now. Maybe we hear about them more now but it seems that the number of pedophiles has gone up and that might have to do with the internet.
Another thing about little league cheerleading, or cheerleading at all, the parents have gotten WAY out of hand. My friend was coaching middle school and she left because the parents would find something to be pissed about and threaten her.
I think the situation was treated poorly on both ends. The team shouldn't have kicked off the little girl and did away with that chant as well as any other chant deemed inappropriate, and the parents should never have gone to the news. This didn't need to become national.
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