Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a son that has the potential and likely to play college sport at division 1 level.
My spouse will not stop talking and obsessing about it, like it is a full time job. Checking all the websites and social media posts to see who is committing, what teams need players, who entered the portal and all of this other stuff. It is morning, noon and night. I have said it is too much but am gaslit as if I am not hoping my kid achieves his goals, because I am not obsessing over it constantly.
We have two other kids that are feeling slighted because of this as well.
I guess I am just venting here.
He is doing what is necessary for your son to succeed as an athlete. That's what a parent should do.
Athletes who become extremely successful are often obsess about what they do.
Your two other kids should calm down. Do you want to deny your son a chance to succeed because your two other kids are jealous?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bigger concern is if your kid is actually not legitimately a D1-caliber athlete.
That places tons of stress on the kid thinking they aren't good enough.
Hopefully, there is good reason to believe that your kid is D1 material...either because they play on a top-tier club team that sends lots of kids D1 or a coach you know to be knowledgeable and honest has told you so.
That isn’t really a “big concern”.
Every athlete knows something can happen to make the D1 offer not happen.
It’s also why companies like to hire athletes, they handle stress well, disappointment, getting over hard times like injury, etc.
I don't know what you are talking about. There are tons of parents of athletes who have zero chance at a D1 offer...yet they talk as though somehow, some way it can happen because they read about some random kid (with zero insight or knowledge on that kid) that in some slight way resembles their kid and they received a D1 offer. I don't try to spend much time with those families because it's sad and you can see the disfunction.
That's a far cry from something can happen (i.e., an injury?) to make the D1 offer not happen...like a kid we know that was on the cusp of a Power 4 baseball offer but now needs Tommy John surgery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bigger concern is if your kid is actually not legitimately a D1-caliber athlete.
That places tons of stress on the kid thinking they aren't good enough.
Hopefully, there is good reason to believe that your kid is D1 material...either because they play on a top-tier club team that sends lots of kids D1 or a coach you know to be knowledgeable and honest has told you so.
That isn’t really a “big concern”.
Every athlete knows something can happen to make the D1 offer not happen.
It’s also why companies like to hire athletes, they handle stress well, disappointment, getting over hard times like injury, etc.
Anonymous wrote:We have a son that has the potential and likely to play college sport at division 1 level.
My spouse will not stop talking and obsessing about it, like it is a full time job. Checking all the websites and social media posts to see who is committing, what teams need players, who entered the portal and all of this other stuff. It is morning, noon and night. I have said it is too much but am gaslit as if I am not hoping my kid achieves his goals, because I am not obsessing over it constantly.
We have two other kids that are feeling slighted because of this as well.
I guess I am just venting here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, OP. That’s frustrating, and you are definitely correct to feel that the behavior is over the top, embarrassing, and potentially will harm your obsessive spouse’s relationship with all the kids, even the phenom.
One of our kids is an excellent athlete and now plays and starts at a top D1 program. It is often fun and exciting to see your kids do so well, but parents have to remember that they are separate beings from their children. My MIL and FIL do the exact same thing as your spouse, always scouring the internet for stories about DC, wanting to dissect every play of every game, even disparaging DC’s teammates for not getting DC the ball enough. It’s ridiculous, and we don’t engage. When we see family friends, they always mention that the in-laws keep them updated on DC’s every move, but don’t talk about our other kids. I want to shake some sense into them.
Send them the cell phone of the head coach. I am sure that person would love to receive texts from them..
+1
Excellent idea! They need to be heard.
Anonymous wrote:The bigger concern is if your kid is actually not legitimately a D1-caliber athlete.
That places tons of stress on the kid thinking they aren't good enough.
Hopefully, there is good reason to believe that your kid is D1 material...either because they play on a top-tier club team that sends lots of kids D1 or a coach you know to be knowledgeable and honest has told you so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, OP. That’s frustrating, and you are definitely correct to feel that the behavior is over the top, embarrassing, and potentially will harm your obsessive spouse’s relationship with all the kids, even the phenom.
One of our kids is an excellent athlete and now plays and starts at a top D1 program. It is often fun and exciting to see your kids do so well, but parents have to remember that they are separate beings from their children. My MIL and FIL do the exact same thing as your spouse, always scouring the internet for stories about DC, wanting to dissect every play of every game, even disparaging DC’s teammates for not getting DC the ball enough. It’s ridiculous, and we don’t engage. When we see family friends, they always mention that the in-laws keep them updated on DC’s every move, but don’t talk about our other kids. I want to shake some sense into them.
Send them the cell phone of the head coach. I am sure that person would love to receive texts from them..
Anonymous wrote:We have a son that has the potential and likely to play college sport at division 1 level.
My spouse will not stop talking and obsessing about it, like it is a full time job. Checking all the websites and social media posts to see who is committing, what teams need players, who entered the portal and all of this other stuff. It is morning, noon and night. I have said it is too much but am gaslit as if I am not hoping my kid achieves his goals, because I am not obsessing over it constantly.
We have two other kids that are feeling slighted because of this as well.
I guess I am just venting here.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, OP. That’s frustrating, and you are definitely correct to feel that the behavior is over the top, embarrassing, and potentially will harm your obsessive spouse’s relationship with all the kids, even the phenom.
One of our kids is an excellent athlete and now plays and starts at a top D1 program. It is often fun and exciting to see your kids do so well, but parents have to remember that they are separate beings from their children. My MIL and FIL do the exact same thing as your spouse, always scouring the internet for stories about DC, wanting to dissect every play of every game, even disparaging DC’s teammates for not getting DC the ball enough. It’s ridiculous, and we don’t engage. When we see family friends, they always mention that the in-laws keep them updated on DC’s every move, but don’t talk about our other kids. I want to shake some sense into them.
.Anonymous wrote:We have a son that has the potential and likely to play college sport at division 1 level.
My spouse will not stop talking and obsessing about it, like it is a full time job. Checking all the websites and social media posts to see who is committing, what teams need players, who entered the portal and all of this other stuff. It is morning, noon and night. I have said it is too much but am gaslit as if I am not hoping my kid achieves his goals, because I am not obsessing over it constantly.
We have two other kids that are feeling slighted because of this as well.
I guess I am just venting here.