Anonymous wrote:Yes, it's his life and it is okay to try different sports. However, if your DS had advanced so far ahead in a sports activity close enough to put him on the path to make an advantage for college admissions, then if he drops it at that point and chase another activity that isn't going to provide that benefit other than his pleasure, would you recommend it? DS has reached a level close but not enough, but at least he has a chance in other activities. He knows all these things as well, but we feel when they are 14-15 they just don't get the importance of it. This could help him secure a better college admission, why shouldn't we try to insist on him not quitting that and chasing after another.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it's his life and it is okay to try different sports. However, if your DS had advanced so far ahead in a sports activity close enough to put him on the path to make an advantage for college admissions, then if he drops it at that point and chase another activity that isn't going to provide that benefit other than his pleasure, would you recommend it? DS has reached a level close but not enough, but at least he has a chance in other activities. He knows all these things as well, but we feel when they are 14-15 they just don't get the importance of it. This could help him secure a better college admission, why shouldn't we try to insist on him not quitting that and chasing after another.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it's his life and it is okay to try different sports. However, if your DS had advanced so far ahead in a sports activity close enough to put him on the path to make an advantage for college admissions, then if he drops it at that point and chase another activity that isn't going to provide that benefit other than his pleasure, would you recommend it? DS has reached a level close but not enough, but at least he has a chance in other activities. He knows all these things as well, but we feel when they are 14-15 they just don't get the importance of it. This could help him secure a better college admission, why shouldn't we try to insist on him not quitting that and chasing after another.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't let my child play football. But not because it would be a "waste" of previous "investment" in other sports. Jeepers!
That just adds another dimension to it, and our main concern is injury as he is probably up against an offense line on average 30-40 pounds bigger than him. We have tried all the usual arguments, and he is adamant other sports is just as injury prone and football makes him stronger mentally and physically. We feel the downside outweighs the upside.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't let my child play football. But not because it would be a "waste" of previous "investment" in other sports. Jeepers!
Anonymous wrote:DS wish to play football in HS much against both parents consent. He says that is what makes him happy now, after having participated in various clubs and leagues playing other sports such as soccer and swim team. He was good at playing these other activites and we the parents spent considerable amount of time, energy, travel, and resources on these activites plus others. At each one of them he excelled to a fairly high levels but did not pursue to keep going, instead finding another activity. We are not happy with his decision to keep quitting an activity in pursuit of another when he could excel in the activity he showed interest, capability, and us having invested serious time and resoruces. Besides, we are not happy with his choice of football because of injury concerns and his choice to play a position which we feel contributes nothing other than playign offense. Anyhow, we even let him try that for sometime now but we cannot keep supporting his schedule anymore due to travel and time involved. We have other children to take care of as well, and we told we both cannot commit the time and resources required to play football going forward, especially given he has thrown away all the other activities we spent serious time and effort on.
Are we wrong to feel undone with all the effort we put in along with him all these years for him to now throw it all away and do something else totally against our wishes. And, if he insists on it, are we supposed to support him by sacrificing more of our personal time to enable this? where does this end if we keep doing it. We feel enough is enough and time to us to attend to the other things we need to spend time on, and let him focus on academics or play a sport where he and us invested resources already.