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The badge of pride as a ******* in high school was dunking your inflamed limbs into an ice bucket for 20 minutes, in Mr. Dewey’s office — the school trainer AND every girl's crush. I always wanted  someone to pour ice water over my sores, and ****** always being healthy enough as Jess told the teacher loudly enough that she hurt her ankle at track AGAIN needed to see Dewman. Guess they were best friends now. **** When I fractured my back, I didn’t even get a doctor's note. Because I wasn’t on a school team. I was a gymnast for an outside club, not high school varsity. My high school had disbanded the gymnastics team in the 70’s. Said it was too much of a liability. The last team picture hung in the award cases on the first floor. I wished I could be one among those vintage leotards, framed in gold — the warriors of high school. Most of my classmates didn’t know I even did a sport. They just thought I was a bookworm who was flat-chested. Only the girls poked my abs in the locker room, asking how I got them. So I iced my wounds at home. I didn’t even know my back was broken and for a month I drank ibuprofen. Sharp pains biting more frequently, I finally went to the doctor. The nurse asked me if I wanted to look while she injected me with an isotope that poisoned my dreams of finishing the season. Green neon lit my bones, shedding the diagnosis — no gymnastics for six weeks. At school, I dressed to fit my backbrace: baggy t-shirts and sweatpants. My straightener rusted. Messy buns took precedence. I tried to go to practice, but my coaches told me to leave. But I had no where to be! And I had no friends at school. My only friends I watched get awards, not registered, but wearing my warmups. I swore how I could beat the competition from the stands. Stupid back. Stupid Christine. Stupid me. I should have never done that 1 1/2 twist front flip series. Poor bones landing on hard carpet repeatedly, I ignored the jolts as static electricity. Now everyone was working on new skills and I could barely do a cartwheel. That summer we had lots of pool parties — but I couldn’t dive in. So I sat on the ledge, feet dipped in, while everyone played chicken. — — — After six weeks of recovery, I start jogging. I did a roundalf, then a backhandspring. That night I was so sore — my memory of skills strong, but my muscle memory poor. Each stride into a tumbling pass felt like running in a pool. Some days I felt like sprinting down the tumble-track Other days I wanted to bounce on my back, stare at the ceiling, and feel each node of impact. Recovery day was my coach laying down a mat. Today was the day I’d repeat the skill that broke my back. I took a deep breathe and three long steps into the first part of the tumbling pass: roundoff, backhandspring, back layout one-and a-half twist, front flip stuck into a step. My coaches cheered and my friends clapped. I was back. Yes. I was back.
0
Sep 1, 2014
Sep 1, 2014 at 10:30 PM UTC
no gymnastics for six weeks.
The badge of pride as a ******* in high school was dunking your inflamed limbs into an ice bucket for 20 minutes, in Mr. Dewey’s office — the school trainer AND every girl's crush. I always wanted  someone to pour ice water over my sores, and ****** always being healthy enough as Jess told the teacher loudly enough that she hurt her ankle at track AGAIN needed to see Dewman. Guess they were best friends now. **** When I fractured my back, I didn’t even get a doctor's note. Because I wasn’t on a school team. I was a gymnast for an outside club, not high school varsity. My high school had disbanded the gymnastics team in the 70’s. Said it was too much of a liability. The last team picture hung in the award cases on the first floor. I wished I could be one among those vintage leotards, framed in gold — the warriors of high school. Most of my classmates didn’t know I even did a sport. They just thought I was a bookworm who was flat-chested. Only the girls poked my abs in the locker room, asking how I got them. So I iced my wounds at home. I didn’t even know my back was broken and for a month I drank ibuprofen. Sharp pains biting more frequently, I finally went to the doctor. The nurse asked me if I wanted to look while she injected me with an isotope that poisoned my dreams of finishing the season. Green neon lit my bones, shedding the diagnosis — no gymnastics for six weeks. At school, I dressed to fit my backbrace: baggy t-shirts and sweatpants. My straightener rusted. Messy buns took precedence. I tried to go to practice, but my coaches told me to leave. But I had no where to be! And I had no friends at school. My only friends I watched get awards, not registered, but wearing my warmups. I swore how I could beat the competition from the stands. Stupid back. Stupid Christine. Stupid me. I should have never done that 1 1/2 twist front flip series. Poor bones landing on hard carpet repeatedly, I ignored the jolts as static electricity. Now everyone was working on new skills and I could barely do a cartwheel. That summer we had lots of pool parties — but I couldn’t dive in. So I sat on the ledge, feet dipped in, while everyone played chicken. — — — After six weeks of recovery, I start jogging. I did a roundalf, then a backhandspring. That night I was so sore — my memory of skills strong, but my muscle memory poor. Each stride into a tumbling pass felt like running in a pool. Some days I felt like sprinting down the tumble-track Other days I wanted to bounce on my back, stare at the ceiling, and feel each node of impact. Recovery day was my coach laying down a mat. Today was the day I’d repeat the skill that broke my back. I took a deep breathe and three long steps into the first part of the tumbling pass: roundoff, backhandspring, back layout one-and a-half twist, front flip stuck into a step. My coaches cheered and my friends clapped. I was back. Yes. I was back.
courtney-pruitt
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Sep 1, 2014
Sep 1, 2014 at 10:30 PM UTC
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