Anonymous wrote:Congrats to your son OP!
Not surprising the comments from teammates to your son. Based on what parents write on this board--apple likely does not fall far from the tree.
) misinterpret his intent.
I was more looking for ideas on how to explain it better to my child than âthese people arenât your real friendsâ. Maybe thatâs the answer though as they clearly arenât.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they have to be happy in their minds? Sounds like the parents might have said the right things but you didn't like their body language and think that reveals some hidden animosity. Just take the congrats as offered and move on even if you think they don't really mean it. These people are always going to feel more sad for their own kids than happy for yours.
They donât have to be happy in their minds, and there was no congratulations. More like âohâ. Surprised, which makes me think that they think my kid is not worthy. My kids is not the best of the team, but like I said, they have a particular quality that is attractive to coaches. Some of kids were outwardly rude asking my kid why they were picked (and implying why not them). I was just surprised at the reactions, and it wasnât everyone on the team, but I was always taught âif you canât say anything nice donât say anything at allâ. My childâs feeling were hurt. Iâm not asking them to be happy for my kid, and I get that jealously is a common reaction. I was more looking for ideas on how to explain it better to my child than âthese people arenât your real friendsâ. Maybe thatâs the answer though as they clearly arenât.
Sounds like you and your kid are both a bit insecure about being chased. If the talent is so unique, why don't the other parents recognize it? You can be a great pitcher but have a terrible batting average but other people don't wonder why that kid made the team. Just ignore the whatever it is you think needs to be said out loud, and focus on the future. Tell your kid they are probably just said they didn't make the team and don't know what to say. These kids are 12-13 and this is all likely going to change real fast for all of them depending on how puberty shakes out.
^ chosen not chased.
mAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've been on both sides of this situation. It's hard in both. This year, DS didn't make our local team, but made a travel team that competes in a higher division. The dynamic is pretty weird and we just try to encourage him to stay friends with his former teammates as you never know what next year will bring, although some of them no longer want to train with him in some semiprivates that we've done in past years.
This is so sad. Do they think of him as a âtraitorâ or something? They hate the other team because they are rivals?
Unclear. The new team isn't exactly a rival of the old team because they compete in a higher division, and he didn't even make the old local team that his friends made (though he was invited back for a supplemental tryout and promised a spot after he had already accepted a spot on the new team). It created a weird dynamic among friends, and I have a hard time not blaming the local coach for splitting up a group of kids that have played together for a long time - he cut a kid who isn't objectively worse than the kids he brought up and in fact proved to be at least subjectively better because he's the only one that moved up a level. New team is better for development, but at this age, the social aspects are more important than anything to DS. Great to make new friends, but sad to be separated from old ones who also don't want to train with him any more because they're no longer on the same team or line or however their parents justify cutting him from their training group....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they have to be happy in their minds? Sounds like the parents might have said the right things but you didn't like their body language and think that reveals some hidden animosity. Just take the congrats as offered and move on even if you think they don't really mean it. These people are always going to feel more sad for their own kids than happy for yours.
They donât have to be happy in their minds, and there was no congratulations. More like âohâ. Surprised, which makes me think that they think my kid is not worthy. My kids is not the best of the team, but like I said, they have a particular quality that is attractive to coaches. Some of kids were outwardly rude asking my kid why they were picked (and implying why not them). I was just surprised at the reactions, and it wasnât everyone on the team, but I was always taught âif you canât say anything nice donât say anything at allâ. My childâs feeling were hurt. Iâm not asking them to be happy for my kid, and I get that jealously is a common reaction. I was more looking for ideas on how to explain it better to my child than âthese people arenât your real friendsâ. Maybe thatâs the answer though as they clearly arenât.
Sounds like you and your kid are both a bit insecure about being chased. If the talent is so unique, why don't the other parents recognize it? You can be a great pitcher but have a terrible batting average but other people don't wonder why that kid made the team. Just ignore the whatever it is you think needs to be said out loud, and focus on the future. Tell your kid they are probably just said they didn't make the team and don't know what to say. These kids are 12-13 and this is all likely going to change real fast for all of them depending on how puberty shakes out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they have to be happy in their minds? Sounds like the parents might have said the right things but you didn't like their body language and think that reveals some hidden animosity. Just take the congrats as offered and move on even if you think they don't really mean it. These people are always going to feel more sad for their own kids than happy for yours.
They donât have to be happy in their minds, and there was no congratulations. More like âohâ. Surprised, which makes me think that they think my kid is not worthy. My kids is not the best of the team, but like I said, they have a particular quality that is attractive to coaches. Some of kids were outwardly rude asking my kid why they were picked (and implying why not them). I was just surprised at the reactions, and it wasnât everyone on the team, but I was always taught âif you canât say anything nice donât say anything at allâ. My childâs feeling were hurt. Iâm not asking them to be happy for my kid, and I get that jealously is a common reaction. I was more looking for ideas on how to explain it better to my child than âthese people arenât your real friendsâ. Maybe thatâs the answer though as they clearly arenât.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've been on both sides of this situation. It's hard in both. This year, DS didn't make our local team, but made a travel team that competes in a higher division. The dynamic is pretty weird and we just try to encourage him to stay friends with his former teammates as you never know what next year will bring, although some of them no longer want to train with him in some semiprivates that we've done in past years.
This is so sad. Do they think of him as a âtraitorâ or something? They hate the other team because they are rivals?
Anonymous wrote:God, I hate this. And so many parents (especially Dads) feed into it.
It's this attitude in young athletes that any setback or loss could not be a result of their play, but because:
- the refs missed a call
- coaches are stupid
- Daddyball.
No, sorry. These other kids couldn't bring the same value to the team as your son. That's it. That's the reason.
Its ok for your son to be proud of the fact that he made the team. No need to brag or be showy, but also no need to downplay it either.
Anonymous wrote:We've been on both sides of this situation. It's hard in both. This year, DS didn't make our local team, but made a travel team that competes in a higher division. The dynamic is pretty weird and we just try to encourage him to stay friends with his former teammates as you never know what next year will bring, although some of them no longer want to train with him in some semiprivates that we've done in past years.
Anonymous wrote:
I've never met people like that in music competitions or auditions, where children compete directly against each other for the top spots. Everyone always wishes the other kids luck, and congratulates whoever won or was admitted.
If the team families react that way, it's a sign you need to move up, OP. No use staying for that sort of atmosphere.