I thnk you hit the alcohol too soon. I have no clue what you are trying to say. It makes no sense. And I have boys so I could csre less what the girls wear. |
you make no sense. First you advocate foe 13 year olds wearing make-up and shorts dresses and then you say you you could care less what the girls wear. You should if you are a parent of boys or girls. But the fact that your first thought is alcohol explains it all. Pity your boys. |
I have been to various swim meets in 2 different states and never once saw the teens cheering on the young kids. They could care less. |
Sounds like what you call sweet, I call slutty. To each is their own. |
Where in any of my posts did I advocate for girls to wear makeup or short dresses? That is a decision for them and their parrnts. I have been responding to the posts regarding the teenagers with the young kids at banquets and how some feel it is inappropriate. Teenagers wearing short dresses to events is pretty standard. That doesn't take away that they are good kids. If you choose to not want your kids around your choice, but your kids will be missing out on meeting good people. |
This statement is contradictory. You say parents need to "get out and participate", but should also "involve your kids in activities in which you do not try to control everything". My kids have participated in a lot of sports ( including swimming for awhile). I drive them to practice and pick them up. I will give other kids a ride if needed. I go to the games and cheer for the team. I say thank to the coaches at the end of the game. That is it. That is the only "participation" I need to do. I give my kids space. I am not on the team. I do need to go to pep rallys and galas and dances and hover around and party with the other parents. Swim teach subculture is weird. If you like it, fine. But you have to admit that it is different than other sports. I personally think it is a bit much in terms of parental involvement and social events. |
Sorry typo, I meant : "I do NOT need to go" |
| What is so weird about Swim team? |
Read the previous four pages of this thread. Jesus. |
| If swim team being "weird" means girls and boys are finally in a sport together, older kids cheer for younger kids and vice versa (yes 00:54, this even happens every day at practice and of course at the meets at our pool), parents from various elementary schools get to know each other during and outside of practice at the pool, children get to be in a sport that is both individual and team oriented, get daily exercise for less than $100 a month, get to be with many of the same children from age 4 to age 18, get awards for every little bit of improvement no matter how bad their starting time is, and get awards for citizenship and athletic awards at the end, I guess I like the "weird" swim culture. |
If your kids were on any type of travel team, you would be having dinner with other parents, maybe even staying overnight together, and getting to know those parents very well. One of the soccer travel teams in our neighborhood even made a float for a parade together. Swim team at least is only about 6 weeks. Travel soccer is just about all year long! |
| Swim team parents verses travel soccer, basketball, softball etc is not the same. Have (are) doing both. Sorry but have to agree with the other posters. Many of the swim parents are really strange. The fact that they all hang out at the pep rallies and other team events is just strange. It most certainly does not happen in other sports the same way. |
| FYI, the parents don't hang out. It takes about 30 parents to run a swim meet. |
Swim teams are local to a specific area and kids stay on the teams often for over 10 years. I don't really get why it's strange that the parents wouldn't hang out together after dropping off their kids. They don't participate in the pep rally. By the time kids are on the swim team they can usually swim independently so at a pep rally parents are just hanging out among themselves. There's definitely a culture of travel parents hanging out together too. Obviously you don't like your pool or the people there. Sorry you don't like it, but our pool is great and so are all the others ones nearby as well. There is no gala, and everyone is down to earth and all the kids go on to high school together. You get to meet entire families including all the brothers and sisters, not just the one elite player. I have to think that places like Bethesda, these parents are over the top whether they're at the pool, on the soccer field, at the gymnastics facility, or at the school. If you want more down to earth people, move out of neighborhoods full of rich, type A parents. |
+1 well said. Just another point. The Bethesda pools have nice people too. They rich type A parents are all at the Country Clubs :0 |