| I know more talented adults who are pissed their parents never supported or “pushed” them, than vice versa. |
So which is it We have two other kids that are feeling slighted because of this as well. Or Siblings love brother and are very proud of him and supportive Also stop making this about YOU. Your H is proud and excited, let it go. Stop with all the insecurity. |
^^^ this |
Is this Op? Not clear. Why would you rewrite your OP like this, later? Is this a troll post? |
She’s a little off |
+1. I even know teens who are sad and mad their parents simply “let them quit” swimming or bball or soccer despite them having speed or coachability. ALL kids have phases of not wanting to practice or study, that shouldn’t be a reason to quit an activity. You quit on a good day, not a moody or bad day. |
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You are mad at your H for being proud of his kid who is doing something only .0001% of people do.
Think about that and do better |
Troll post. Posted in wrong section as well. op is mad at her husband for talking about sports recruiting when they also supposedly have an agent. Troll |
There is a strange disconnect in this post. I have never heard of a kid who is considered a pro draft pick that literally can't pick up the phone or have their coach pick up the phone and talk to a coach at any college and get them interested nearly immediately. Everyone knows everyone who are 5 Star recruits, so as soon as you say your kid's name they will immediately perk up. Obviously, if the NCAA D1 national champion is interested....every other school has to be interested. It's confusing. |
That's sports helicopter parenting. |
OP said her kid has D1 potential. So in this analogy he is an A student, not a B student. Still no guarantees, though. |
| Op is a troll. And our of league trying to fake it for a fake college recruiting post. |
You know a bunch of crybabies, then. |
To the OP, you know the post above is from some sports nut, right? And OP, you are right to be concerned about the impact on your other kids. This PP would have you focus on one kid's 'chance to succeed" at the cost of the two other kids resenting you as parents for the rest of their lives. The other two kids' goals, talents, and aspirations are every bit as important and valid as the star athlete's goals. The kids need to know this -- and star athlete kid needs to know it too, or he will lose all humility and perspective. OP, please, you need a talk with your DH when he is NOT about to go to a game, is not on a post-game high, and the kids are not around. IF you've tried talking to him already, he may need to hear with crystal clarity that the other kids feel ignored and he is driving a wedge between your kids and between himself and the other kids. If your DH is so far gone he wont' listen to you, can you enlist a male friend of his (preferably another sports dad) and ask that guy to be blunt with DH about how his obsession is going to distance him from his other kids and pressure star athlete too much? Sometimes people with a fixation just cannot hear what spouses are saying, but will listen to a peer from outside the family (unfortunate, but true). If your other kids have their own activities and interests, DH needs to be spending a lot more time encouraging them on those. It does not help that the in-laws are just as obsessed. I'd be asking them very firmly to come to the other kids' events or activities and make a big deal of the other kids--without talking to the other kids constantly about their sibling, if they do that already. |
The crybabies were the parents who didn’t want to drive their super athletic and coordinated kid to practices. So said No. Stunted their growth and progress; that was that. |