Anonymous wrote:OP I am a quitter too and I regret everything I ever quit, from ballet age 6 when it hurt my feet but the director of the school said I was a "natural"and I was, even with the first three toes the same length, to many other things as an adult...
My DS has tendencies to do this too, but his dad is not a quitter, he is a "see it through to the bitter end" person and we never offer quitting as an option.
gEntly and with encouragement you can do the same.
Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.
To the pp above: why wouldn't you allow your DD to quit something she hates? Two years is a pretty good commitment and I get not wanting her to be a quitter but, why make her do ice skating? Maybe if you back off she would find something she likes. Would you like to be forced to do an extracurricular activity just because someone else wants you to do it?
Did you miss where I said that she's been told she can quit if she replaces skating with something else? Because all she has to do is say "I want to take gymnastics/dance/soccer/Girls on the Run/karate/swimming" and I'll enroll her in that and she can stop skating.
BTW, she doesn't REALLY hate skating. She just doesn't have as much fun since her skating buddy quit, plus now that she's in the higher freestyle classes it's harder, and she is not good at not feeling progress.
Not PP you were responding to, but there are plenty of children out there who crave more downtime. Why do you absolutely want her to do something else? Is this the only activity she has outside of school?Also, she's the kid and you're the adult. Why don't you help her out by suggesting something she's never been exposed to that you think she might like? You're sounding a little cruel and tone-deaf, here, basically. And I'm a Tiger parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.
To the pp above: why wouldn't you allow your DD to quit something she hates? Two years is a pretty good commitment and I get not wanting her to be a quitter but, why make her do ice skating? Maybe if you back off she would find something she likes. Would you like to be forced to do an extracurricular activity just because someone else wants you to do it?
Did you miss where I said that she's been told she can quit if she replaces skating with something else? Because all she has to do is say "I want to take gymnastics/dance/soccer/Girls on the Run/karate/swimming" and I'll enroll her in that and she can stop skating.
BTW, she doesn't REALLY hate skating. She just doesn't have as much fun since her skating buddy quit, plus now that she's in the higher freestyle classes it's harder, and she is not good at not feeling progress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.
To the pp above: why wouldn't you allow your DD to quit something she hates? Two years is a pretty good commitment and I get not wanting her to be a quitter but, why make her do ice skating? Maybe if you back off she would find something she likes. Would you like to be forced to do an extracurricular activity just because someone else wants you to do it?
Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.
Anonymous wrote:I don't let my DD quit a lot of things. She's wanted to quit ice skating for two years now. She tells me every week she hates it. I tell her "Okay, tell me what you want to replace it with." Until she has an answer, ice skating it is. Two nights ago I told her I thought about her wanting to quit, and I'll let her quit when she finishes high school.
I'm going to roll that back to letting her quit after she ENTERS high school and picks fall and spring sports IF she has mastered Freestyle 5. THEN she can really quit.