Anonymous wrote:My child plays on a sports team with another teenager. Fairly high level for this area. The kids love their sport and practice a lot on their own outside of regular practice. There is one kid who seems to be being pushed very hard by their parents. Like telling the kid not to mess up at games, yelling at them when they make mistakes. This is a good kid who is very good at their sport. Is this just what it takes to go D1, or is this abusive? No one has said anything to either the kid or the parents to my knowledge, but it's getting harder to witness and stay out of. I feel like someone needs to stick up for this kid before they breakdown.
Anonymous wrote:My child plays on a sports team with another teenager. Fairly high level for this area. The kids love their sport and practice a lot on their own outside of regular practice. There is one kid who seems to be being pushed very hard by their parents. Like telling the kid not to mess up at games, yelling at them when they make mistakes. This is a good kid who is very good at their sport. Is this just what it takes to go D1, or is this abusive? No one has said anything to either the kid or the parents to my knowledge, but it's getting harder to witness and stay out of. I feel like someone needs to stick up for this kid before they breakdown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sideline the parents “A lot of people are talking about how mean you are to your kid in public. Just thought you should know”. And walk away.
Great idea if you want to be known as a gossiping nutcase. That will pretty much guarantee a spotlight is shined on your own parenting.
OP, mind your own kid and your own business. The fact that you also put your kid in an intense sport and let it suck up all your time means you aren't prioritizing the right things either.
Anonymous wrote:Sideline the parents “A lot of people are talking about how mean you are to your kid in public. Just thought you should know”. And walk away.
Anonymous wrote:I can tell you from experience that if you raise this kind of thing to a mandated reporter, they will very, very carefully use any word other than abuse to describe it because no, it doesn't clear that bar in their opinion.
Is it good parenting? No. If one adult did it to another (say in the context of a romantic relationship) would we call it abuse? Yes. But is it CPS reportable? Guessing not. You can cross check the law in your state to verify. Some states have stronger emotional abuse provisions than others.
Anonymous wrote:The coach should handle. Ideally the coach would has ethical standards. I think a discussion privately with the coach is warranted.