Most people who start at 10 will still not be "competitive." |
| We have a really smart kid and we pushed him to be more physically and scholastically successful from an early age. And now we have a teen who has dropped behind by a grade and we learned all about residential mental health treatment centers. Wondering whether we pushed too hard is one of those burdens that keeps me up at night. |
Same. And yeah, I'm not going to be winning national races or performing at Carnegie Hall, but that's not the point of hobbies. The older DS needs some internal motivation. |
Yet some people are, whether or not they admit it. |
| I encouraged my kids to do well in school and to participate in activities they were interested in, but I let them choose and didn't force them to do things they no longer enjoyed. Looking back, they were not stand outs in anything, but enjoyed and grew from the various experiences. Now - as college and grad school age adults they are super involved in many things they enjoy - and many are new interests they picked up in college or beyond. I'm proud that they have the confidence to put themselves out there and continue to explore what the world has to offer. If a young person is regretting what they didn't do as a child or in HS I'm afraid they may be focused on the wrong problem. |
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2 things:
- everyone, your child and you included, has selective memory (remember what they want) - hindsight is 20/20, but we all do the best we can, with the information we have on hand, at the time of any decision Our college junior, over winter break, told DH and myself that we did a "pretty good" job of raising him. Laughing, I said, "only pretty good? What do you think we should have done differently?" With a straight face, he claimed we should have made him clean his room/put away his laundry every time, so that he wouldn't be so messy today. Now, if you had been in our home HALF the times we worked on this with him, until we realized we were battling the sinking Titanic, and stopped fighting with him over laundry, you would have realized how funny this was |
| My kid blamed me for not teaching him to paddle a kayak. He learned to ski around the world, had a bilingual education and went to a world leading university. I told him that he could teach himself how to paddle. |
Wish I knew what the differently was. |
| My challenge is to raise the child I have not the child I wish I had. I am grateful that I insisted he learn to swim starting at age 4 when he would cry when we made him do it. And it’s now a life skill he will hopefully engage in his entire life. |
| Kid is a real jacka$$ to put this on you. Sorry but that’s how I feel |
+1. You want to learn how to play baseball as an adult? Go find a batting cage on the weekend and leave your adult parent alone. Geez. |
| No. If anything, I regret not recognizing that he is a different person than me, of a different age and gender, living in different time and place. I have been learning to recognize that his strengths are his own. But I do prod him quite a bit anyway (which is normal for my circle). |
+1. So the kid can take up his own hobby now, it’s not like it’s too late. What a jerk. |
| My elderly mother tells me that no matter what you do, your kids will blame you for something. She’s right. I wish my parents pushed me into sports and physical activity when I was younger. They didn’t focus on this at all. They pushed and encouraged various music lessons and theatre. I enjoyed theatre but dropped it all by high school. I hated music with a passion and always begged to stop. If they had pushed sports, maybe I would have hated that too. |
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Your son can start both of those things today. If he is 25 at 45 he will have 20 years experience.
He won’t though because it hard and he doesn’t like hard things. Academics was easy for him. |