Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC’s friend does year round swim team plus a summer team. His mom says the kid is really good at it and he enjoys it. Overheard my DC talking to his friend about it.. friend said ‘i hate it and its not fun at all’. My DC asked him why he does it then. He replied because my parents make me do it.
We know several kids like that. Other ones who burnt out and hate their sport now. Some who went to college for their sport and quit within a year because they hated it so much. So don’t believe when parents say ‘they love it so much’. I am sure some small percentage of kids do love their sport enough to benefit from travel sports experience but majority do not.
I don’t believe this, as someone around a lot of college athletes. Almost none quit after the first year, and the ones that did, it was clearly due to injury.
This is the kind of hyperbole common on DCUM but very unusual in real life.
The number of kids that quit college sports during and after first year is big. For some -- it is the first time they feel they can do what they want. But yes it is a big thing. Probably not football and basketball but almost every other sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones I know it is more about the socialization for kid & parents. The parents have money so it is nice hotels, nice meals, lots of alcohol for parents.
It’s pretty much this. We can afford it and I’m a middle age parent without much of a social life. I don’t care if my kid plays in college. That’s not the point.
Think of this like a giant sleepover without the hassle of the sleepover. My daughter loves the sport and plays the games and then they all have fun in the indoor pool. Later they meet up somewhere for dinner. I’m at a table in a different part of the restaurant socializing with parents, because is this also my social life and like a mini vacation. It’s a nice hotel and a nice restaurant in a different city. Who cares if we are in a city or in the middle of nowhere. It’s a break from work and normal life.
Yes. She loves it and I love it. But we both love travel and nice hotels.
Why not just have an actual sleep over, or why not just travel to a new city and stay at a nice hotel while doing so? You can do everything you described without being part of the travel sports industrial complex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC’s friend does year round swim team plus a summer team. His mom says the kid is really good at it and he enjoys it. Overheard my DC talking to his friend about it.. friend said ‘i hate it and its not fun at all’. My DC asked him why he does it then. He replied because my parents make me do it.
We know several kids like that. Other ones who burnt out and hate their sport now. Some who went to college for their sport and quit within a year because they hated it so much. So don’t believe when parents say ‘they love it so much’. I am sure some small percentage of kids do love their sport enough to benefit from travel sports experience but majority do not.
I don’t believe this, as someone around a lot of college athletes. Almost none quit after the first year, and the ones that did, it was clearly due to injury.
This is the kind of hyperbole common on DCUM but very unusual in real life.
The number of kids that quit college sports during and after first year is big. For some -- it is the first time they feel they can do what they want. But yes it is a big thing. Probably not football and basketball but almost every other sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones I know it is more about the socialization for kid & parents. The parents have money so it is nice hotels, nice meals, lots of alcohol for parents.
It’s pretty much this. We can afford it and I’m a middle age parent without much of a social life. I don’t care if my kid plays in college. That’s not the point.
Think of this like a giant sleepover without the hassle of the sleepover. My daughter loves the sport and plays the games and then they all have fun in the indoor pool. Later they meet up somewhere for dinner. I’m at a table in a different part of the restaurant socializing with parents, because is this also my social life and like a mini vacation. It’s a nice hotel and a nice restaurant in a different city. Who cares if we are in a city or in the middle of nowhere. It’s a break from work and normal life.
Yes. She loves it and I love it. But we both love travel and nice hotels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC’s friend does year round swim team plus a summer team. His mom says the kid is really good at it and he enjoys it. Overheard my DC talking to his friend about it.. friend said ‘i hate it and its not fun at all’. My DC asked him why he does it then. He replied because my parents make me do it.
We know several kids like that. Other ones who burnt out and hate their sport now. Some who went to college for their sport and quit within a year because they hated it so much. So don’t believe when parents say ‘they love it so much’. I am sure some small percentage of kids do love their sport enough to benefit from travel sports experience but majority do not.
I don’t believe this, as someone around a lot of college athletes. Almost none quit after the first year, and the ones that did, it was clearly due to injury.
This is the kind of hyperbole common on DCUM but very unusual in real life.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like most of our friends and acquaintances whose kids play travel sports are always saying "They Love It" after describing a three day weekend of driving a total of 800 miles, eating crappy fast food in the car three meals a day and playing in 3 different tournament games. It always sounds very defensive as if they're trying to justify spending a weekend in this fashion.
I know some of these kids might legit love doing this for the love of the game, but how many others are simply being pushed to do all this by their parents? Travel sports seem to be getting completely out of control, and it's hard to believe that so many families are happy to be spending their weekends this way. I feel like parents we've known for years become completely obsessed with these travel leagues once they join, and the sport becomes their life.
Anyone else get this "They Love It" statement from a travel sports parent?
Anonymous wrote:Seems like most of our friends and acquaintances whose kids play travel sports are always saying "They Love It" after describing a three day weekend of driving a total of 800 miles, eating crappy fast food in the car three meals a day and playing in 3 different tournament games. It always sounds very defensive as if they're trying to justify spending a weekend in this fashion.
I know some of these kids might legit love doing this for the love of the game, but how many others are simply being pushed to do all this by their parents? Travel sports seem to be getting completely out of control, and it's hard to believe that so many families are happy to be spending their weekends this way. I feel like parents we've known for years become completely obsessed with these travel leagues once they join, and the sport becomes their life.
Anyone else get this "They Love It" statement from a travel sports parent?
Anonymous wrote:I realize this is a troll post, but I can’t help myself.
OP, imagine whatever activity your kid likes best.
They get the opportunity to do it three or four times in a single weekend with a dozen or so friends, plus a couple of group meals, and ideally a stay in a hotel with an indoor pool where they get to spend evenings together.
Is it really that hard to understand that kids might really enjoy something like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones I know it is more about the socialization for kid & parents. The parents have money so it is nice hotels, nice meals, lots of alcohol for parents.
It’s pretty much this. We can afford it and I’m a middle age parent without much of a social life. I don’t care if my kid plays in college. That’s not the point.
Think of this like a giant sleepover without the hassle of the sleepover. My daughter loves the sport and plays the games and then they all have fun in the indoor pool. Later they meet up somewhere for dinner. I’m at a table in a different part of the restaurant socializing with parents, because is this also my social life and like a mini vacation. It’s a nice hotel and a nice restaurant in a different city. Who cares if we are in a city or in the middle of nowhere. It’s a break from work and normal life.
Yes. She loves it and I love it. But we both love travel and nice hotels.