There are a lot of very good skaters who start very young who get stuck on the double axel.
So doubles are more possible and much more likely for me to achieve? Thank you for replying since I wanted to know what is a realistic goal for me.But I think the other doubles are definitely possible and much more likely- with good coaching, dedication, and a lot of practice.
Yes, even if I do not get the triples I would still love figure skating. And to know doubles are much more likely and possible for me is great because I wanted to know what is realistically possible and for it to be my goals! Even if I’m not doing jumps yet but in the future at least I know what my goals are.Even if you do not get to your 2A and triples, you will enjoy figure skating very much. You can definitely do 2+2 combos. Have fun!
Yes, I do want to skate for as long as possible and to be honest I just wondered if it was possible but I was mostly sure I won’t be able to since there are lots of factors. But I do want to enter local competitions just the small ones to experience it because it seems like a fun experience. I love skating so if I could manage to do doubles in the future that would be nice! I did think about college/school and it’s busy but this is the time I finally pursued what I wanted to do so maybe I’d have to focus a bit on school/college and pick it up again but my love for skating won’t change I just know and feel it. Thanks for telling me your experience!Its physically possible to do doubles and triples but both are very unlikely, just in terms of the number of people who start taking lessons vs the number of people who land even one double. To do higher level jumps, you need a combination of natural ability, lack of fear, good coaching, time, and money. For doubles, it’s more about the latter 4, and these are factors you have more control over.
A big issue is for people who start when they are your age is that it’s a time when school/social life gets really busy and then college after that. But know that if you eventually find you don’t have enough time to work on higher level jumps now, if you start putting in the groundwork for it now, you’ll be in a great place to pick them back up in college or after. There’s no artificial deadline, and you can get an axel or doubles in your 20s just like you could when you’re 17. You might be too late for a competitive career, but when it comes to being a good skater for your whole lifetime, you have so much time ahead of you!
It's fun to have ‘reach’ goals, especially for something that takes as much work as skating does. I also understand why teen/adult starters have a goal of doing 2a/triples because that’s whats on TV and it doesn’t seem that ‘real’ yet. But when you actually get to it, when you’re a woman in your 20’s or 30’s having landed the rest of your doubles, to start a double axel and triples as a full size adult can be a large risk of injury and overuse, risking your ability to do doubles and skate for decades in the future, all for a jump you might be doing for a year or 2. For competitive kids, they have to get triples by a certain age to be in the game - they knowingly risk their bodies to be able to do it. So many ex-elite skaters have had hip replacements that I know, and it requires so much grit and sacrifice. However, those of us who start late have no such time constraints, and therefore, if you skate because you just love skating, don't you want to do it for as long as possible? This is just my experience as a late starter who's gotten doubles, and this is why I don't intend to seriously work on triples.