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rurallib

(64,621 posts)
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 04:48 PM Monday

OK - how do the figure skaters do all those spins without barfing?

Or at least falling down like a drunken sot?

I was watching one who must have done 20 or so spins on one toe while she held her other foot in the air and all I could think of was how discombobulated I would be.

How do they do it? Do they take dramamine? Do they get immune to it over time? They not only don't barf or fall, they usually follow the spins with some incredibly graceful skating. I'd be on my ass for an hour at least.

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rurallib

(64,621 posts)
4. That is about what happened. I watched this woman and thought
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 04:54 PM
Monday

I was going to upchuck myself. So then it made me wonder how do they overcome what seems to be a very basic response to the spinning.

I must learn to turn my head.

ProfessorGAC

(76,191 posts)
3. They Call It Spotting
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 04:53 PM
Monday

If you notice, as they spin their head stays still as long as possible, focusing their eyes on one stationary spot, then they move the head faster to catch up, but for a shorter time.
They don't get disoriented by a constantly moving background and the quick stop after they turned the head allows inertia to get the blood back where it belongs.
Ballet dancers have been doing this for a century or more.
Also, people who can't do that, or those for whom it doesn't work, get dizzy and their performance never achieves their potential. We never see those folks on TV.

EYESORE 9001

(29,546 posts)
6. Some people are just naturally resistant to the spin
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 05:01 PM
Monday

Like myself, for instance. I’m far from an Olympic skater, but I had a really cool swing when I was a kid. The ropes were parachute cord hung from a 20-ft-high tree branch. I could wind it up until my feet didn’t touch the ground - tighter with assistance. Spin for about 200 turns - faster if you tucked-in. The ropes would become a tightly-coiled, muscular propulsion method. Newbies often succumbed to motion sickness. It became notorious in the neighborhood as the spin’n’barf machine.

rurallib

(64,621 posts)
7. I was wondering if there were people who were kind of immune from the spin response
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 05:04 PM
Monday

Man, that sounds like a superpower to me. I get sick on a merry-go-round. I was no fun to go to the fair with.

EYESORE 9001

(29,546 posts)
8. Are you familiar with the Rock-O-Plane?
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 05:07 PM
Monday

Some people refused to ride with me when I ‘drove’, as I would set up momentum to spin madly

EYESORE 9001

(29,546 posts)
13. This one time? on the Rock-O-Plane?
Tue Feb 10, 2026, 01:33 AM
Yesterday

I was on a ‘performance’ run - solo, since no one wanted to go with me. Immediately after the carny moved my cage to the next position, I released the locking mechanism and I rotated to a fully upside-down position. I heard gasps from the crowd below, including a retch or two, along with people proclaiming they weren’t getting on now. Carny yelled, ‘ride hasn’t started yet.’ I replied, ‘oops!’, hoping he wouldn’t kick me off. I figured he’d rather let me go ahead than wrestle with that cage.

johnnyfins

(3,609 posts)
10. I got stuck in one of those.
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 05:50 PM
Monday

Ocean City, NJ. Upside down at the top. Almost an hour. With my former girlfriend, now wife.

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