+1 OP the point of sports is exercise and enjoyment, not personal misery to live your parent's dream. |
So what? What matters most, his happiness or being 'the best" or "on travel team"? Focus on the child. |
No, he's being unduly influenced by idiot boy middle schoolers who think swimming is not cool and basketball is. Swimming is not a sport you can generally stop and pick up later--it's a sport you need to be conditioned for, so stopping can make it very hard to pick it up again. OP--is there an older boy H.S. boy on his club team or summer team who could maybe talk to him/encourage him? Have you had him talk to his coaches about this? Or could switching to a new club team maybe reinvigorate him. Middle schoolers don't understand swimming. By high school, all those boys telling him how uncool swimming is will admire your son for his dedication (up at 4am for practice), remarkable physical condition, and regular interaction with the girls on his team. Don't listen to all these people telling you to just let him throw in the towel. Obviously, you can't force a kid to continue in a sport. But you should really make sure he's making the decision to leave the sport for the right reasons. |
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How many years has he been swimming year round? Middle school is a prime time for kids to quit sports in favor of more social ventures, which may be basketball for your son.
Ultimately, as long as he's playing a sport and staying busy and active, who cares? If he doesn't love swimming so much he can't imagine life without it, he won't be swimming in college anyway. Signed, former D1 swimmer. |
Don’t you have any hoops in your neighborhood? Any indoor courts (like at a YMCA)? You do realize that even grown men continue to play basketball just for fun, right? |
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It’s funny because friends of ours had a kid in the exact same situation.
Kid did manage to get on a low level AAU basketball team and made the HS freshman team, but saw the writing he would never make varsity. Ended up turning to XCountry and track and loves it and the team. He has absolutely zero regrets on giving up swimming. I assume like OP’s kid, he wasn’t putting up Olympic-like times, so who knows if he would have worsened relative to his competition when older. |
Oh God you made it sound even worse! Also, getting up that early is incredibly unhealthy for teens, doofus. |
So? What is the end game, exactly? He is not going to be an Olympic swimmer. Even if he were talented enough, he doesn't like swimming. Sports are supposed to be for fun, for team building, for exercise. Literally WHO CARES. |
this is very similar to our situation down to the same sports (swimming and basketball). I have chosen not to say anything and just nod and try to be supportive. Last spring it was football he was interested in trying out and by the time fall rolled around he lost interest. Trying very hard not be the "you can't do XYZ because of swim". At the end of the day, he's still a kid. I get it. Club-level swimming is lonely. I'm glad, however, that he got to experience a full season of HS swimming, including districts, and now on to regionals - excitement level is totally different. |
Um, he picks a new sport to try or he returns to swimming? Or maybe he joins the drama club? What is wrong with those options, genius? Not enough social clout for mom? |
Why do you keep insisting he can't play basketball? I have a friend whose son did exactly this but he quit soccer. In 7th grade. There are teams that will take him for sure. Also swimmers don't call swim teams "travel". It's club swim. I'm wondering if you are a troll. |
| Swimming is foe losers OP |
+1. I'm convinced this forum is full of childless misanthropes. |
| Have him keep swimming but not as much and let him try what he wants. |
Go on YouTube and search something like 11 or 12 year old travel basketball. Boys that age are not just horsing around, they're amazing. DS only looks good because he's playing against untalented kids in a loosely organized local league. He would not make an truly organized team. It's just fun to him but not fun enough for him to be motivated to relentlessly practice all the time to get better. This interest in basketball is being fueled by delusions and peer pressure and bullying. |