Anonymous wrote:I was a band kid growing up. Marching band, concert band, jazz band, pep band, I did it all for years even in college and beyond. Won awards, was first chair, got music scholarships. Our older kid was a band kid, too. Younger kid, it turns out, is more of an artist. Painter, drawer, animator, and has a fabulous talent. It became clear by HS that band wasn't taking younger kid anywhere; it was just marking time (no pun intended). I told kid in high school to drop band and take art instead. Go for it and see where it goes, because it wasn't about me. Kid is much more valued in the art department than they ever were in the band program, and is now a stand out winning awards. I can't draw my way out of a paper bag, but I can recognize that this is where kid needed to go, and I'm glad I could offer my blessing. Help your kid find what she is good at, and has a passion for. Try a little of everything through park and rec, etc. Their thing probably won't be what we did, because our kids are their own people. The best part of parenting is seeing what they love, glimpsing the world through their eyes.
Anonymous wrote:She’s 9. You said she’s active, silly, and full of life. how is that “drifting”? She has a lifetime to figure out what’s “hers.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, I understand the judgment based on my post and I probably deserve it. But the truth is, I just really want her to find something that builds her confidence and keeps her active. I know she's not an extension of me, and I’m not trying to live through her. I just want her to find joy in something.
So far, she’s been lukewarm about everything we’ve tried: tennis lessons, gymnastics/tumbling, recreational swimming (she refused the swim team), rec lacrosse, and now volleyball camp. She’s already said no to soccer, basketball, dance, cheer, and any kind of martial arts. The only thing she kind of likes is gymnastics, but only wants to go once a week.
She does enjoy art, so we might revisit that.
I just want her to find something that makes her happy. Her older sister participates in two activities I know nothing about, and she’s grown so much from them. I just want the same for her.
Those are all sports, save art. Maybe she’s not sporty.
And she’s already doing gymnastics once a week. So what’s the problem?
The problem is she's hoping for her to be a superstar at one thing instead of dabbling in many things.
Anonymous wrote:It's possible your kid is not into organized sports or clubs of any kind, but it's also possible you haven't shown your DD enough options. You could try broadening your idea of what "counts" as an activity. We know kids who do community service clubs, choir, 4-H, D&D, theater, scouts, sewing, foreign language club ... there's so much out there.
I'm not unsympathetic. I was a horse girl, in the "literally anything involving a horse is for me, I am never bored" sense. I loved horse camp. DD likes riding horses but is not interested in the care and feeding, or learning about them, and horse camp was a bust. Disappointing for a minute, but we've moved on. She is really into training our dog right now. We've also taken a couple of different sports intro classes together, to try something new - we took a fencing class at the rec center, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, I understand the judgment based on my post and I probably deserve it. But the truth is, I just really want her to find something that builds her confidence and keeps her active. I know she's not an extension of me, and I’m not trying to live through her. I just want her to find joy in something.
So far, she’s been lukewarm about everything we’ve tried: tennis lessons, gymnastics/tumbling, recreational swimming (she refused the swim team), rec lacrosse, and now volleyball camp. She’s already said no to soccer, basketball, dance, cheer, and any kind of martial arts. The only thing she kind of likes is gymnastics, but only wants to go once a week.
She does enjoy art, so we might revisit that.
I just want her to find something that makes her happy. Her older sister participates in two activities I know nothing about, and she’s grown so much from them. I just want the same for her.
Those are all sports, save art. Maybe she’s not sporty.
And she’s already doing gymnastics once a week. So what’s the problem?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, I understand the judgment based on my post and I probably deserve it. But the truth is, I just really want her to find something that builds her confidence and keeps her active. I know she's not an extension of me, and I’m not trying to live through her. I just want her to find joy in something.
So far, she’s been lukewarm about everything we’ve tried: tennis lessons, gymnastics/tumbling, recreational swimming (she refused the swim team), rec lacrosse, and now volleyball camp. She’s already said no to soccer, basketball, dance, cheer, and any kind of martial arts. The only thing she kind of likes is gymnastics, but only wants to go once a week.
She does enjoy art, so we might revisit that.
I just want her to find something that makes her happy. Her older sister participates in two activities I know nothing about, and she’s grown so much from them. I just want the same for her.