Anonymous wrote:Agree that you do what you can. You have a good excuse, but lazy sah 2 parent households with no excuse are selfish
Anonymous wrote:In MS and HS they can do school sports. Until then you do what you can.
Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids?
<8 yo organized sports - you’re not missing much. Other than the swim lessons, I wouldn’t sweat it.
Once they’re 8 or so, if it’s something they’re interested in, I’d look for ways to give them opportunities to play. Nothing crazy - just things through after school programs their school or aftercare might host (our aftercare had a basketball program with no extra cost), city rec programs, or camps with sports if you need camps for childcare in the summer anyway. My kids have gotten a lot from their sports teams - socially, physically, and in “life lessons” sort of way. They’re are plenty of other ways to check those boxes in life, so I’m not at all saying the youth sports are something to make huge sacrifices for in life, but especially if your kids are eager, I would look for easy opportunities for them to dabble as they get older.
Anonymous wrote:I need way more info to answer your questions.
Are your kids asking to do sports?
What are your kids doing if they aren’t doing sports (are they active in other ways playground/riding bikes/etc. or are they on electronics)?
Why are sports a problem for you? Cost? Time?
Most rec leagues will waive the cost if it’s a financial hardship.
Anonymous wrote:Swim team is largely for families with a stay at home parent, OP. The schedule doesn't work for working moms, so don't plan on that long term. But just worry about now. How old are the kids?
On the one hand, do what you can. On the other hand, I definitely have friends who let themselves off too easily and don't try that hard to do things for their kids that they really should do. It's impossible for us to know which camp you're in.
Anonymous wrote:My kids do want to do sports. But I am a single parent. I have a co parent who has never helped with sports (payment or attendance). He is helpful in other ways (takes them every weekend and some weeknights) so I don't want to push it anymore with them. I cannot afford sports anymore.
Doing swim lessons with the city every summer is doable for me. Anything else seems to stretch me too thin. Did anyone else only do swim lessons? My kids love swimming, and we have a pool at our apartment, so it seems like the best way to go. Maybe if they enjoy swimming they can be on a team when they are older and I'll hopefully have more money for it.
Anonymous wrote:
Doing some lessons will not lead to team as most kids start team between 5-7. Team is 3-7 days a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused, you have 50-50 and dad has the kids a lot. Talk to him. Are you getting child support? If yes, some of that money is dad's portion as he also has a lot of expenses and the same as you in his home.
Doing some lessons will not lead to team as most kids start team between 5-7. Team is 3-7 days a week.
doing a team 7 days a week in early elementary school would make the kid a real outlier. No family needs that, much less a single mom. I don’t think even the sportiest families I knew of did that much at that age.