Anonymous wrote:OP here. Go Nats! I’m sure their parents held them back. Funny, isn’t it watching the best of the best.
To play at that level requires a parent who believed in you, your talent and lots and lots of practice.
And telling you an 84 B is not going to get you where you want to go.
I work with a guy whose son pitches against Bryce Harper in high school in travel ball. His son had a full ride scholarship to a great school. His son quit baseball as a Junior because he burned out. Elite level talent who got so tired of the sport that he dropped out, gave up a full ride scholarship and a shot at professional baseball.
The key to dealing with a child, any child, is finding the balance between helping them achieve their dreams and still enjoy the things that they love and are strong in. My co-worker will tell you that he should have read the signs when his son was saying he wanted to take summer off from baseball or not joined that elite travel team that took a ton of time. The talent to pitch at a higher level is still there but the enjoyment of the game completely died. His son is successful in a totally different field but doesn't play baseball or rec softball. He has nothing to do with the game.
My concern for any child whose parents are unable to help them find a balance is burn out. It is my concern about the kids who start math tutoring in kindergarten. It is my concern about kids playing travel ball in early elementary school.
You can bet that all of the players in the World Series have worked long and hard and that hard work, combined with their natural talent, is paying off. But there are plenty of people who had the same talent who dropped out because they were burned out. There are your Andre Agassi's who was an amazing tennis player but hated the game until he was in his 30's. He played because he was forced to as a kid and then because he made a ton of money as a young man. He didn't start taking the game seriously until he was older and had time away from his fathers influence. He also is honest about how he hated tennis, ate like crap and experimented with drugs.
Your job is to help your ambitious child find a balance. Entering grades into a spreadsheet is not balance. Not being able to hold it together when she brings home a B is not balance. Reminding her of her goal to attend school X is not balance.
Support her effort by helping her learn to balance study with relaxing.
And for the record, if she is scoring 94-97 on most of her tests she is not going to be the Valedictorian. There are kids scoring perfect scores in her class. And that is ok. And you should be prepping her that there are kids with great grades who don't get accepted at the top schools because there are a lot of kids with top grades, and APs/IBs, and lots of extras and volunteer work. She might be one of the ones who get in but she might not be. That is still a good distance away. But if she is not aware that this is a possible outcome she might be crushed her senior year.
Just like there are tons of elite athletes who work hard, do all the right things, and end up playing Minor League baseball and never make the Majors.