Anonymous wrote:My son (10) is a great physical player and has a really good sense of the field and game. However, he runs sensitive/anxious, and can easily get down when things go wrong, getting frustrated, sometimes into tears, which helps neither his game or his team.
Have any other parents found ways to help their kids like this muscle through the mental game? I'd love some tips and tricks!
Anonymous wrote:My son (10) is a great physical player and has a really good sense of the field and game. However, he runs sensitive/anxious, and can easily get down when things go wrong, getting frustrated, sometimes into tears, which helps neither his game or his team.
Have any other parents found ways to help their kids like this muscle through the mental game? I'd love some tips and tricks!
Anonymous wrote:Play a lot of soccer
Anonymous wrote:My son (10) is a great physical player and has a really good sense of the field and game. However, he runs sensitive/anxious, and can easily get down when things go wrong, getting frustrated, sometimes into tears, which helps neither his game or his team.
Have any other parents found ways to help their kids like this muscle through the mental game? I'd love some tips and tricks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son (10) is a great physical player and has a really good sense of the field and game. However, he runs sensitive/anxious, and can easily get down when things go wrong, getting frustrated, sometimes into tears, which helps neither his game or his team.
Have any other parents found ways to help their kids like this muscle through the mental game? I'd love some tips and tricks!
Leave the kid alone. Praise him for what he does well and do not criticize him. He will surely want to quit if you are too overbearing.
Anonymous wrote:My son (10) is a great physical player and has a really good sense of the field and game. However, he runs sensitive/anxious, and can easily get down when things go wrong, getting frustrated, sometimes into tears, which helps neither his game or his team.
Have any other parents found ways to help their kids like this muscle through the mental game? I'd love some tips and tricks!