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Join a class at the gym, and join an adult rec league.
More efficient exercise, let me get you out of your provincial neighborhood |
I started my favorite sport in my thirties. |
| if you can’t play, the sport asked to be the team manager and that looks good for leadership on your college résumé as well! |
| As a parent, I didn’t know this either until middle school. It’s too late to pick up a sport by then unless you are truly gifted as an athlete. Sadly sports are no longer fun at all. |
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I hear you. I'm sorry.
I was never told that I needed a foreign language for college applications. |
Can you run? My niece didn't have any sports experience prior to hs and ended up able to run x-country and track on not only her high school teams but at a Div 1 uni as well. |
You have bigger problems than sports participation, then. Are you in therapy? |
Do they wear costumes? Are there storylines? Is he a heel or a hero? That sounds so fun! |
What sucks is that so many people believe that if you don’t play sports there is something wrong with you. |
And what secretive sport is that |
| troll |
| Search any sport you want and look at adult leagues. Most have them. I wasn’t athletic as a kid but am looking forward to playing casually in some in retirement. I only got interested in volleyball when my own kid started playing. |
| My husband and I have talked about this -- we were both raised really working class and were fortunate to be able to raise our kids upper middle class, but there's a lot of knowledge that we didn't have about how these things work. There's a steep learning curve when you change social classes and honestly it takes a couple of generations to fully move up, I think. I remember getting a call from the rec center about the swim lessons I had put my three year old in. I was informed that she was less advanced than the other three year olds and that she was "holding the class back". Private lessons were suggested -- for a three year old! Which I thought was nuts until I overheard one of those King Pin dads talking about how his kids all started with private swim lessons at age 2 because that was apparently really important. We lived in a house that overlooked an elementary school playground and I used to hear one nutso dad out there every night coaching his kid with t-ball and yelling at him. Sometimes I wonder what ever happened to that dad and his kids. I wonder if they became great athletes or if they're like "Oh my god, that guy was nuts. I'm so glad I moved far away to Wyoming" or whatever. |
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I completely agree with this. Even if you do start young, it might be the wrong sport for your child. Parents who lucked out and started early in a sport that's the right fit can be so smug. I wish there were better ways to try a few sports without committing the team and money to a full season if it doesn't work out.
My younger daughter tried lacrosse at 7 (apparently that's already "late"). She began disliking it because the team got super competitive and stopped being fun after just one year. Now she's trying another sport at 9 and is again considered behind. My 12yo daughter does several activities including summer swim team, but I was told she needs year-round swim lessons to make swim team worth it! It's exhausting. |
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Even for parents that you know… Putting children in sports at ann early age does not mean they’ll enjoy it and stay with it.
I let my children try a variety of sports. For both - gymnastics lasted two years. Soccer for five years. Swimming on and off for eight years. Wrestling on and off. My oldest did wrestling and tennis in high school. He regretted not sticking with wrestling when he was younger, he participated for two years in elementary and then took a four year break before joining the HS team as a sophomore. He picked up tennis in high school having done nothing more than play around at the neighborhood tennis court. He didn’t make varsity in either sport. My youngest has been swimming on and off since he was six. He made the team as a freshman. But is likely going to get cut as a sophomore. He also joined tennis as a freshman, and like his brother didn’t do anything more than just play around at the neighborhood tennis court. |