The Skater Master I Avishi Bagga I Little Writers Program
By admin in Bullying Stories, Original Stories on August 4, 2022
An Original story on bullying and inner power written by our student Avishi Bagga.
Avishi is 10 years old, a young writer from Gurugram. She is inspired by imagination which motivates her to express her daily thoughts through writing because she feels that she can make people learn something new in a fun way. We are proud to have her as a student of the Little Writers Program, an Online Creative Writing Program using Applied Storytelling & Applied Theatre tools under the mentorship of Trainer Khusshbo Chokhaani. We congratulate Avishi for this exemplary true self-expression.
The Skating Master
Imagine a 4-year-old girl started Learning how to skate, but an older meaner girl starts making fun of her and makes her feel weak and less of herself. Hi, I am Avishi Bagga, and this is the story of my achievement as a skater.
When I started learning skating, then an older girl, told me that I would never be able to win even a single medal, because I sucked at it then. She whispered to me every day ‘you suck, just stop learning, you will never get to the next level, you will always be stuck here, so if you want to quit, do it now or just waste your time and money.’
At first, I thought that what she was saying, might be true, and I asked my trainer and Mumma about it. They both had the same answer, do not listen to her and keep practicing, you will get there, and remember to do this for yourself and not for anyone else.
I thought about it long and hard. Since I was young and facing this issue, I couldn’t do much about it, but I remembered my mum and coach’s words and kept practicing. I fell a few times and soon got better.
Since she thought she had mastered skating, she wouldn’t come to practice and not even compete.
The coach worked hard with me, and after a few years when I was 6 years old, I went to my first competition. Even though I had practiced a lot, I still lost. The older girl said that ‘I told you so, you can quit now.’ I cried for a long time. Then I decided that in the next competition failure wasn’t an option.
I worked harder this time and scored 2nd place after a few months. For my first win, we celebrated, danced, sang, and that night went by without us knowing
The next day, when I went to practice, my coach congratulated me, on the win and said, ‘next time we will work harder and make you a master.
I worked harder and felt more confident than weak. Then after a few months of practicing, I had another competition, in 2017, I won my first gold medal. That day my coach upgraded me to the next level.
The gold medal shined on my neck like a star in the night sky, it was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.
I felt proud of myself, but something in me told me that there was something else for me to achieve more than this. I asked my coach and he said, that, the older girl wasn’t coming to practice, as she was very overconfident and the last thing was to beat her.
After a few months when I was 9 in 2020, before the pandemic, we raced, since she hadn’t practiced, she won the first round, but because of her overconfidence, she fell in the 2nd round, making me win that round, during the 3rd round she slipped and fell again, making me win.
This time, I felt the satisfaction run through my body. I couldn’t believe it, I had won. She cried and did apologize after losing, to a child who was 3 years younger than her.
My story talks about not to listen to others, not to pay attention to haters. Focus on your work, do not feel disheartened, Whatever you believe you can achieve.
Leave your valuable comments for encouraging our students to innovate, explore and express more.
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