Yeah, so let's just have your kids stay at home and play video games all day. That way they won't develop self-confidence, a positive body image, a sense of teamwork and dedication and hard work, exposure to people from different cultures, and a million other things. Yes, my parents spent money on fees and travel, but what I gained from playing sports has served me well my entire life. Especially as a woman, there is nothing greater than the hard earned respect for what your body can do as opposed to what it looks like. |
My family is different and spends a lot of time together, so missing 1 family event is not a big deal. .... cousins are like brothers/sisters... I guess it would be a big deal if my kids never saw extended family. I think it is the everyday interactions that are more important and less forced. |
So now children who don't go to every game even at age 10 are going to spend their lives playing video games all day? You can develop those things many ways, even with video games and certainly on less competitive sports teams and even on travel teams that allow missing a game for a wedding or funeral. I don't get how there's such a sense of teamwork on the field but no sense of teamwork as a family. Why can't a child experience both? |
So now a 10 year old's basketball game is more important than a wedding or a funeral? When does this devotion to sports over all other things start? The minute the kid makes a travel team? The minute they start in a sport at age 4? |
That's great that you live so close. Most families don't anymore. Everyone goes off to the city or wherever the greatest job offer comes from for them even if it means mom and dad or sis won't live nearby. Many families only see each other on special occasions. No one wants to take the time to visit unless it's a big deal. OP's sister lives 4 hours away. That's a big enough distance to have to stop a usual routine to see someone. |
This is a wise post to me. I have a close friend whose sports nuttiness for her oldest child seems based on desperation, though it may look like dedication and commitment and other good qualities. The desperation is not a bad thing necessarily. How I see it is she is so worried that her kid will not fit in, have a bad life experience, and go in the wrong direction (like hanging with the drugee kids) from being cut from a team or whatever, that she is doggedly focused on his team sports. I also think that my friend may be projecting onto this kid a success that maybe she wanted or somehow living through the kid. Not sure any of this is relevant to this thread, but I did wonder if some of this was at play for OP's sister. Or at least I did not assume that OP's sister was just worried about keeping the commitment to the team. There can be a lot of kooky stuff at play when it comes to parents and their kids sports. So much so that it made me think this was more about the parents really than the actual kid making a choice. It sounds like OP's sister wouldn't play the get-out-of-sports card for any event. It does not sound like the sister diminishes the importance of the wedding. Sounds like the tourney might trump a funeral too. I guess that's the level of importance (or desperation) she feels. |
You are the one projecting that anyone not dedicated to sports above everything else is a loser. How do you feel about all the people that couldn't possibly even spend this type of money on their child? |
Your post is not at all responsive to the post above it. Did you quote the correct post? Anyway, you're insulting the celloist and the artist and the creative writer and the chess player and the math club kid. Do you really believe that playing sports is the only way to get a kid from playing video games all day and the only way to develop self-confidence and a positive body image? So defensive, I wonder if you're in your 20s. No one is saying sports don't (or at least can't) impart great things. Usually they do. Sometimes they impart really crappy things, like anorexia in a gymnast or cheerleader. But BTW, missing one game for a wedding doesn't cancel out the benefits of playing years of sports! |
You are the one missing the point. Do you know how much it costs for instrument lessons. What the poster that did a cost benefit analysis did was to say the benefit is only a college scholarship. That poster does not understand the "other" intangible benefits of anything... math club, robotics, creative writing, instruments, etc.... All cost money... lots of money. |
Actually the PP was responding to the sports minded parent who said all the sacrifice was worth it because the college education was funded. "But my family was like that, and you know what? It paid for my college education IN FULL. So suck it." I saw it as simply commenting on the cost of sports verses college. While there are some great benefits, you both seem to be missing the fact that there are also problems that arise with such devotion and cost. The more talented child gets all the attention and time of a parent, families lose their savings nest, child develops a perfectionist or elitist attitude, family and friend relationships outside the area of interest diminish. To some, there are more benefits with sports or specializing, but others see it as pluses and minuses. |
There are people that want their child to be an athlete no matter what and there are people who will only devote a certain amount of time and money to each child no matter what. We know families that had rock star gymnasts who just weren't willing to devote the time, money, and energy into making them Olympians. And parents that coached and sought out travel teams for their child even though the child had no strong devotion or great skill in a sport. |
And some people want their kids to go to an Ivy league school no matter the cost financially or emotionally. the point is ... the good parent gets to know their child before they make parenting decision. The OP of this thread things that she knows what she will do with her imaginary children that are not even born yet. She know exactly what she would do... in 14 years and if she does not do exactly what she thinks she would do ... she wants her mom to hit her upside the head.. You can't parent the kids you think you will have you actually have to wait until your child is born ... then make decisions about how to raise them. |
and then somebody said sports are not worth the money spent unless there is a return on the investment. I highlighted the text for you so you can follow along. The next poster said, unless you kids are in no activities, there is a cost. It does not matter if the activity is soccer or robotics. It all costs a lot of money. |
Where did PP say sports weren't worth the money? I read this differently. The dad of the daughter was complaining about the money spent on the sport. PP stated that the cost to play over the years verses the cost to go to college was close the same. PP didn't see any monetary benefit, but there's no comment on other benefits or problems associated with the sport. |
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I'm the one who posted the math equation. Wow people read so much into posts (whether mine or the OP's or others') that they are engaging in a fictional debate. They call that creating a straw man, no?
Someone posted suck it I got a full scholarship. Someone posted a reminder that there was likely a large financial outlay to get that scholarship. So I thought let's calculate it in one hypothetical instance and see. It was essentially a wash. I can do the same calculation for a kid on a piano or ballet scholarship. I just don't know an example of the monthly outlay for participation in those activities. I assume it's pretty damn pricey. Did not comment on anything more than the little calculation. The people on this thread are projecting and assuming so much that it's actually an interesting aspect of this entire thread and kinda weird. |