Maura isn’t competing this month but she is skating. Last week she took her test to move up to the Alpha level in ISI
competition. I didn’t take her to her lesson that day—it was Martin Luther King
Day and her mother had the day off—but Maura was excited to tell me that she
had passed her test when she got home. I wasn’t surprised and I don’t think her
coach was either. She had already begun working with Maura on her new program.
Maura has been hard at work on her Alpha routine for several
weeks already. It uses the same music and has the same advanced elements but
otherwise it is quite different from her Pre-Alpha program. Her path on the ice is nothing like it was before. Maura is learning it well. She has a good sense of
timing and to my unpracticed eye the new routine looks almost as polished as
the old one. She still has a few of the same old problems, though. Maura has
always had trouble keeping her arms up.
Maura will have to skate really well when she competes again
at the end of February if she wants to bring home a medal. Unlike in her last
competition she won’t be the only skater her age at her level. She’ll have at
least one friend from her home rink skating against her and probably others as
well. There are many more skaters her age at the Alpha level than there are at the
pre-Alpha level. Perhaps I can use that to motivate her to work harder getting
ready.
Maura always works hard when she is on the ice with her
coach. She truly loves skating and she also loves her coach. It is harder to
convince her that she needs to work off the ice. She has an exercise routine
that she is supposed to do every morning but she doesn’t always remember to do
it, even when she is reminded. I know how she feels. I don’t like to exercise either
and I’m certain that walking around with pennies on the backs of your hands isn’t
nearly as fun as skating.