Anonymous wrote:Objectively I know I’m not. I tend to be a glass half empty type of person and I’m working on that in therapy. My kid (8) is generally great, but I keep focusing on what I could have done better. He’s not great at using manners consistently, he doesn’t know how to swim well enough to pass the swim test yet or ride a 2 wheel bike. I know as a parent I should have pushed those things harder (swim & bike—we model and discuss using manners a lot), but there are just some things that have to be lower on the priority totem pole given time and resources.
Today is a beautiful day but DS doesn’t want to go to the pool because all of his friends have their swim bands and he doesn’t and he doesn’t want to practice in front of them understandably. We’ve had a private swim instructor lined up but she’s been unreliable and it’s been tough to find someone else at this point in the summer. We’ve just totally failed on the bike thing though, and DS hasn’t pushed it because it’s hard for him. We need to get him to do things that are hard for him and learn to overcome difficulties. I just don’t want him to feel left out or left behind due to us not pushing him to learn to do these things.
I’m probably just in a mood, but I feel like others around me have this parenting thing down better than I (we) do. I’m sure that everyone probably feels that way occasionally but I feel it pretty often. I just don’t want to mess it up, especially since we only have one.
It gets better. The other day, I told my husband I wish I'd known what my DD was going to be like at 16 back when she was in 3rd grade and it was a struggle every single day to get her to do her summer work. This summer she's been doing it all on her own. She still doesn't love it, but she's doing it. I spent literally years wondering if she'd ever get to the point of accepting that there were some things she needed to do and she just needled to buckle down and get it over with. It took her a while, but she's there. Finally.
I agree with other PP's that if it's possible for you to take your son to another pool, just for lessons, that might help. It is so hard being odd man out, I feel for your son. And in this situation, I'd do what I could to work with his limitations.
And I have a story for you on the bike riding. My DD was learning how to ride a 2 wheeler when she was 4. We took the pedals and the training wheels off the bike she used when she was 2-4, turning it into a balance bike. It worked great for her. Our next door neighbors kids, 6 and 9, couldn't ride two wheelers either. They borrowed the balance bike and both of them learned how to ride 2 wheelers that summer. They looked a little bit ridiculous on that tiny little bike meant for a preschooler, but it was comfortable and not scary and they could zoom all over the place on it, and once they had balance on it translating it to a regular bike was natural.
I have an only child, too. And it is so easy to focus intently on where we failing, or where we're super worried about our kid. We only have the one. If you can, pick out some things your son does well so you can redirect your focus to that. My DD may have been impossible in 3rd (and 4th, and 5th, and 6th, and...) grade when it came to her summer homework, but she practiced piano without prompting. I'd just tell myself she has the ability to work at something when she sees value in it, so I needed to hope she'd be able to make the transition to work at something when she didn't see value in it. And it helped me make sure to let her know I saw her working at her piano pieces since I tended to spend too much time worrying and not enough time appreciating.