Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, and thank your lucky stars if they aren’t. I’m serious. I have one kid who is super sporty, and another who gravitated to other things. The sporty one is more conventionally popular and maybe high school is an easier ride for him, but the other kid just had so many more cool options and life wasn’t dominated by the inflexibility of sports practices. High school coaches basically own your kid during the season in a way that no other activity seems to do. And it’s not like my kid is going to be recruited at the college level so it feels silly to me to have his life so dominated by a team sport.
Any activity undertaken at a serious level will feel hyper-controlled, OP. I'm the poster with the pre-pro music kid, and the lessons and performances and chamber groups and music theory classes, not to mention the orchestra schedule, make for a regimented life. Perhaps the difference is that we're not under one person's thumb. There are multiple teachers and organizations, so it doesn't feel cult-like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: Thanks for your honest replies. I DO NOT feel bad about her not being in sports, if anything I feel FREE! But I see these parents of tight-knit friend groups and I worry DD is missing out somehow. But she’s a content girl with many friends, so I don’t know why I worry. It’s always hard when people say, “Oh, she’s not in a sport???” with a look of shock on their faces. I never know how to respond.
*parents posting to social media, that should say
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Thanks for your honest replies. I DO NOT feel bad about her not being in sports, if anything I feel FREE! But I see these parents of tight-knit friend groups and I worry DD is missing out somehow. But she’s a content girl with many friends, so I don’t know why I worry. It’s always hard when people say, “Oh, she’s not in a sport???” with a look of shock on their faces. I never know how to respond.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, and thank your lucky stars if they aren’t. I’m serious. I have one kid who is super sporty, and another who gravitated to other things. The sporty one is more conventionally popular and maybe high school is an easier ride for him, but the other kid just had so many more cool options and life wasn’t dominated by the inflexibility of sports practices. High school coaches basically own your kid during the season in a way that no other activity seems to do. And it’s not like my kid is going to be recruited at the college level so it feels silly to me to have his life so dominated by a team sport.