Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is the great equalizer. The kids who were at the top of the game at one point start having growth spurts, their bodies change and suddenly the scholarship that mom and dad dreamed of is slipping away. The kids who didn't have that early talent gain ground and surpass them. People develop at different times.
you see this in every sport. That is why you want your kid in as many activities as possible because they lose confidence, they grow out of it, literally in some sports.
There are certain changes to the body that training and working out can't and won't change to get you back to where you once were.
don't pigeon hole your kid into something because when these changes happen, you have nothing to fall back on.
to some extent. The ones who really get left behind are the very small kids who were coordinated early but never grow. The big athletic kids will get their coordination back
Anonymous wrote:DD just grew over an inch in the last 6 weeks and her feet jumped a whole size. Now she a bit less coordinated, seems not to have the dexterity she did previously, etc. For parents who have been through this, any tips on the best way to help get some of this back? She's also feeling a bit less confident as well.
Anonymous wrote:Make sure she is stretching to avoid Osgood Schlatter and Sever's!
Anonymous wrote:Make sure she is stretching to avoid Osgood Schlatter and Sever's!
Anonymous wrote:She just has to get used to her body. It will come back.
is rough. He also went through Osgood's (knees), then hip/groin. 13-15 were tough. He looked slow in distances, though still had good ball skill.
Anonymous wrote:this is the great equalizer. The kids who were at the top of the game at one point start having growth spurts, their bodies change and suddenly the scholarship that mom and dad dreamed of is slipping away. The kids who didn't have that early talent gain ground and surpass them. People develop at different times.
you see this in every sport. That is why you want your kid in as many activities as possible because they lose confidence, they grow out of it, literally in some sports.
There are certain changes to the body that training and working out can't and won't change to get you back to where you once were.
don't pigeon hole your kid into something because when these changes happen, you have nothing to fall back on.
Anonymous wrote:this is the great equalizer. The kids who were at the top of the game at one point start having growth spurts, their bodies change and suddenly the scholarship that mom and dad dreamed of is slipping away. The kids who didn't have that early talent gain ground and surpass them. People develop at different times.
you see this in every sport. That is why you want your kid in as many activities as possible because they lose confidence, they grow out of it, literally in some sports.
There are certain changes to the body that training and working out can't and won't change to get you back to where you once were.
don't pigeon hole your kid into something because when these changes happen, you have nothing to fall back on.
Anonymous wrote:DD just grew over an inch in the last 6 weeks and her feet jumped a whole size. Now she a bit less coordinated, seems not to have the dexterity she did previously, etc. For parents who have been through this, any tips on the best way to help get some of this back? She's also feeling a bit less confident as well.