I didn't think anything was actually going to come of AMA declaring cheer a sport. It didn't seem that relevant to me. Glad it's actually affecting change though! This is exciting.
Some of my favorite things to do in SF are Haight St, AT&T Park, and Twin Peaks. Haight is basically the hippie district and it's a really cool glimpse at San Francisco culture and why the city is what it is. AT&T Park is fun if you like baseball (particularly the winningest team in baseball...
I think this is a really interesting strategy but what I'm not understanding, isn't this what classes are for? If I'm a really good base and want to learn to fly, I feel like it makes more sense in term of time, money, and the burnout aspect of double teaming for me to just take a flyer class...
If I didn't grow up in Northern California, I'd totally vacation here. You can spend time at the beach in Santa Cruz, go do San Francisco for a few days, go to wine country, and top it off with naturey things in Tahoe or Yosemite. We really have a bit of everything and it's all within reasonable...
I'm allergic to wheat and if you tell people you have a medical reason, they're very quick to accommodate you. I talked to the chef at my school cafeteria and he changed a lot about the way he planned the menu to help me. No one wants to be the reason you get sick. If you do as people are...
We weren't allowed to at my high school but everyone did anyway. This is the only picture I have of mine, sorry it's not closer up.
That's my high school's logo on the side the tassel starts on and my college's logo on the side the tassel gets flipped to.
I also put a bow on one of my stoles...
That's actually awesome. I'll take watching a clean, simple routine over a sloppy, action packed routine any day. Kudos Michigan.
ETA: I realized that sounded like I was saying it's awesome your team lost. Just referring to the fact that execution is so highly rewarded. :)
The post above mine got me thinking (actual question, not me just making a joke because I live there), why is there no CA Houston? The city's economy is booming and the population is huge so I would have thought that CA would have put a gym there long before moving out of state.
I would think this is because rent costs are so high in the city. It probably economically makes more sense to be outside of the city so you can reap the benefits of the large population with lower rent.
It's the same way in the big city I live in. There are no gyms I know of within 20 minutes...
I've done a bit of research on the administrative side that comes from my school already. I'm talking in terms of how people go about finding a coach, how often them come in, if people find it works better to buy your own mats or go work out at a gym, etc.
Bumping this. I'm looking into the possibility of starting a club at my school and if anyone has any information they could share, it would be much appreciated. In particular, information on how coaching and practice facilities/equipment are handled would be really helpful.