Anonymous wrote:DD, 13, still says she loves her main sport but isn’t nearly as enthusiastic about it as a couple of years ago. She says she’s very stressed out about competing.
We’re obviously giving her a break but hoping she can bounce back.
She plays 2 other sports but isn’t nearly as good in them as her main sport.
Anonymous wrote:As a parent I agree with OP that I would love my teenagers to feel passionate and challenged by an activity - sports, theater, music - whatever it is that inspires them.
However I don’t think this is realistic for many teens (adults too).
If it develops naturally and sticks - great. But if it’s something a teen feels they’re expected to be (passionate! About something) well, we all know how that dynamic plays out. Usually not well.
My 15 yr old DD recently quit a sport she had done since 2nd grade. I think she was a little burned out, but also just outgrew it. She wanted to spend her time doing teen-girl stuff besides sports (I wish I could say she was volunteering or picking up a new sport, or that she now misses old sport). I desperately miss her playing this sport.
But I support her deciding what to do with her time.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares OP
It’s her life
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is in high school and always had his main sport where he completed at a high level and then sometimes, depending on the year, had a secondary. He was all in for the main one and loved it but it was all consuming. There was one through most years in elementary school and he dropped it by 5th grade to pick up two new sports. We thought he would go back but never did. He went all in for one of those for several years and played up until this year, then told us he was done. The time commitment in HS got to be too much. We don’t think he will go back since it’s a team sport and not a lifetime sport you can play as an adult. We think he will find something again based on his pattern but it’s hard to back off and give him space. We are doing that now and he’s not that active at the moment.
Did he pick up other activities as sports dropped down?
Anonymous wrote:DS is in high school and always had his main sport where he completed at a high level and then sometimes, depending on the year, had a secondary. He was all in for the main one and loved it but it was all consuming. There was one through most years in elementary school and he dropped it by 5th grade to pick up two new sports. We thought he would go back but never did. He went all in for one of those for several years and played up until this year, then told us he was done. The time commitment in HS got to be too much. We don’t think he will go back since it’s a team sport and not a lifetime sport you can play as an adult. We think he will find something again based on his pattern but it’s hard to back off and give him space. We are doing that now and he’s not that active at the moment.
Anonymous wrote:My 16 yo son has in soccer though I’d describe it more as stress/performance anxiety than burnout. He has taken breaks as a result and each time comes back more motivated and mentally tougher. But he needs time off to reevaluate and gain perspective. His longest break was a year in middle school. He had a second break in HS but it lasted just a few months. From day 1, we have let him drive all decisions (breaks, teams, outside training) even when we had our doubts. We just remind him that we love him whether he keeps playing or not, whether he is on a top travel team or a rec team, whether he wins or loses, whether he plays varsity or JV, and whether he starts or sits on the bench. We just want him to enjoy playing. I wish more clubs/teams focused on the mental side of sports because I think anxiety results in a lot of kids quitting and hinders performance which then causes a spiral in confidence. It’s a vicious cycle.