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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

that i think the gym tots i enrolled in is unpleasant and not somewhere i would want to take my child to again

56 replies

MamaMaiasaura · 04/03/2009 13:52

I enrolled ds2 in the 0-2 gym tots, envisaging a lot of fun playing on soft stuff and trampolines and tunnels etc. I thought it would be about letting the little ones explore and perhaps a little bit of organised song time.

Started last week and it was ds's first time at anything like this. To start they have a little song in a circle, which was nice. They split the room into 4 areas and the children must go on the equipment following a specific route and not leave their area till 5 minutes elapsed. They then have to form a train and wait to go to the next area. Where it goes on. To finish it all off they have another song time with sticks and actions.

Sounds rather pleasant.... until you realise that your 14 month old doesnt want to follow the route and wants to look around and see what it is all about. THe woman in my area said its fine and natural for them to want to explore. So off he goes, me in tow and picks up a rubber ring. The main instructor then rushes up, removes ring from ds's grip and states that this is all about discipline my jaw nearly hit the floor and i was at a loss what polite thing i could say. She said that the children 'must' do as we want regardless whether they want to and thats how they will learn. I was so cross as that is not what i signed him up for. I thought i'd let it go as maybe i mistook her. She made other comments through the session not just to me. She said that its better than weight watchers, comments several times that i would get hot (had long sleeved t-shirt on), commented on me breastfeeding, commented on everything...

THis week i gave it another shot as i thought it could have been me or just a bad day. In the changing room other mothers said about her too, she calls one of the babies fattie, lump etc, another she says needs a haircut and discipline (20 months), and it goes on. They also have uniform to wear.

Ds2 really didnt like it, he didnt want to go around the course after the second time and just wanted milk and a cuddle. He was crying and very upset. We are sat feeding and she comes and sits next to me when i said he is not enjoying himself and wants a feed. She then said she'll take him around and went to take him (I am feeding him) to which i said No thank you. She then tries again and says he'll enjoy it to which i said more firmly 'no, I am his mother and he doesnt want to' She then made comment that is he nearly done etc. I said (after taking a deep breath), he really doesnt like it much and i dont think this is for him. I then broached last weeks comments and said that i felt this level of organisation and discipline is beyond most 2 and belows and that i really thought it would be more fun for them. There were at least 4 other children crying. SHe said that due to having 18 cildren and 4 workers it had to be organised like this due to health and safety and would refund me. I said i am likely to take her up on this but will go away and think it over. She said that she would like us to come again and she does want ds2 to enjoy it and would try and not be so rigid.. but this whole focus on discipline concerns me at such a young age. Am i being completely unreasonable? Will be off for a bit, nap time and school run etc will check back tonight.

OP posts:
MamaMaiasaura · 04/03/2009 13:53

I did also speak about cognitive development and that at such a young age they are incapable of reason etc and such a level of discipline is literally beyond them. I have to say she was amenable to listening to my view.

OP posts:
notnowbernard · 04/03/2009 13:54

That sounds crap

DD2 goes to Tumble Tots and the session you've described sounds EXACTLY what she does... but she's 2.6 not 14m!

She's in the 2-3y group. Is there a baby group?

thumbwitch · 04/03/2009 13:55

sounds like a crap group to me - my gymbabes was nothign like this BUT when you get to tumble tots level, a bit more discipline is expected, and you are supposed to follow the general route. However, if you don't no one raises an eyebrow, unless you are going the wrong way on a piece of equipment that could be dangerous.

And none of the many children in our tumble tots class comes away crying unless they fall and bang their head on the way out! (DS...)

SoupDragon · 04/03/2009 13:55

Take the refund!!

MadamDeathstare · 04/03/2009 13:56

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

thumbwitch · 04/03/2009 13:56

Ds is 15mo btw; he's in the first tumble tots class, up to 2 (once walking they graduate up from gymbabes)

laweaselmys · 04/03/2009 13:56

It's rubbish that children have to do what you want them to in order to comply with H&S. If there are four members of staff then you can have one 'on' each group of equipment helping the children, plus parents to supervise the kids and they can still move from one lot to the other whenever they want.

crokky · 04/03/2009 13:58

My 2.11 yo would find that hard - he'd see something he wanted to play with and go for it. I once went to an organised session (from age 2) where they wanted the children to sit down and do a picture. Over the other side of the room were tunnels and ball pits etc which they were NOT ALLOWED to go on!!!! The room wasn't even divided - they expected 2yos to look at all this colourful playing kit and be told not to go on it but to draw a picture! I didn't go anymore and I suggest you do the same!

neolara · 04/03/2009 13:58

My dd went to Tumble Tots and, like notnowbernard's dd, did exactly what you described when she was in the 2 to 3 year group. When she was in the "walking to 2s" group, they had the four or five different stations but the kids chose where they wanted to go. It was very relaxed.

Sorry to say but I think your group doesn't sound age appropriate.

TheCrackFox · 04/03/2009 13:58

She sounds completely barking. Discipline for a 14 month old?

Take the refund and stay away form the scary lady.

squeaver · 04/03/2009 13:58

Sounds crap. Take the money and tell everyone you know about you bad experience.

Do you have a Gymboree class near you? My dd loved their classes.

Iklboo · 04/03/2009 13:58

I had a similar experience with one near me. DS did not want to take his socks off and she was half pushing DH out of the way saying "come on X - we take our socks off here" - it was fecking freezing in theh all too. The she kept trying to make him to forward and backward rolls (he wasn't even 3) and trying to force him to climb a small ladder 'properly'.
We made our excuses after about half an hour of DS getting mnore upset and haven't been back. She has tried ringing to say we should bring DS back but we've told her it's not convenient as we both work (true).
Every time we drive past the place DS say 'I hate tumblings tots"

nomoreamover · 04/03/2009 14:00

eeeuw - totally nasty environment - YANBU

Iklboo · 04/03/2009 14:00

This was a local leisure centre one though, not Tumble Tots

MadamDeathstare · 04/03/2009 14:03

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Meglet · 04/03/2009 14:03

YANBU. That woman is bonkers. With little children you have to embrace the chaos .

thumbwitch · 04/03/2009 14:12

I'm not too keen on the fact that this class you're going to is 0-2 anyway, tbh - I think gym babes (~6mo to walking) and then tumble tots (walking to rising 2s) is a better division - otherwise it is hell on wheels - even DS at 15mo is one of the tinies and risks being knocked flying by the bigger ones if insufficient attention is being paid (but there is always someone watching)

Sassybeast · 04/03/2009 14:27

Sound awful and she sounds weird. Take the money back and run!

BouncingTurtle · 04/03/2009 14:49

Awen - my ds would have reacted the same way as yours. If I can't make him do as he's told (he's good sometimes, but generally he still laughs at me when I ask him not to do something!) then what hope has this woman got, especially for quite complex tasks!
She obviously thinks you are a weirdy for bfing a toddler. Tell me where this place is and we can be weirdy toddler feeders together

lionheart · 04/03/2009 14:53

Similar experience here, did not go back.

JustCallMeGoat · 04/03/2009 14:53

14 months is too young for this sort of thing. you are both barking - her for running the class and you for enrolling.

TotalChaos · 04/03/2009 14:54

exactly what I hated about tumbletots! the council gymbabes was much better, kids got 1/2 free play on fun gym equipment like massive trampolines etc.

messymissy · 04/03/2009 15:02

I take my dd 22 months to tumble tots but the 1 to walking age group, they run around all over the place having a whale of a time going on what ever piece of equipment they want - which suits us down to the ground.

Personally I am planning on keeping dd in this group for as long as possible as i have heard from other mums that the 2+ do indeed expect you to stay in your assigned equipment zone until told to move on - I cannot see this happening with my dd for quite sometime - patience is not her virtue at the moment!

Sounds like the wrong age group they have you in, or if its not a TTots group, you have just had the misfortune to find a very authoritarian group leader!

Heated · 04/03/2009 15:06

It's nothing like the TT I take the dcs to! No wonder you're put off, I would be too.

The formalised structure of working at different pieces of equipment doesn't happen until 2+ at ours and even then it's accommodating to individuals - for instance there is a boy who has social interaction difficulties who goes on his own circuit round with his parent on the set of equipment not in use.

Find somewhere friendlier

cornsilk · 04/03/2009 15:16

It sounds like the tumble tots I took ds to when he was 2-3. Sitting in the circle to sing songs for more than 5 mins was hard work!