Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, I will admit that I did force my son to play sports, year round (basketball, lacrosse, and flag). First year I invested a ton of money in lax gear. He hated it. He hated it because he was not as good as many of the other kids. He hated it because he was not as coordinated and the sport is very technical. He would sometimes cry on the way to games. He ended up loving lacrosse and made the travel team. the first summer of travel he fractured his toe. He was crying and crying that he could not play lax for a few weeks. He then was laughing at himself that he used to wish he would break his leg so he did not have to play.
Similar thing happened when he started basketball. He actually cried in the middle of the game beucase he kept on double dribbling and getting calls made on him. He had one game where he was on fire and scored. Ever since then his confidence went through the roof.
The reason I forced him is because I knew the ONLY reason he did not want to do the sports is because he lacked confidence and felt like he did not measure up. As he practiced and got better, he gained his confidence and now would be devastated if I made him opt out. I would not have forced him had he had other interests that took priority. I knew in my heart that he just needed to build his abilities and then he would be OK.
I'm not saying this is for everyone, but for me, as a parent, I will not nurture my kids fears and insecurities. I'm all about building confidence through accomplishments (not just by words and a "good job") and through them working hard and being proud of what they have done on their own. I think the sports and stick with it has served my formerly shy and insecure son well and helped turn him into a confident and proud young man.
This is a great example of how each situation is unique. it worked for this poster, but could easily have backfired and resulted in a frustrated and angry child. I think it is part knowing your kid as a parent, but also (maybe more so) luck.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I will admit that I did force my son to play sports, year round (basketball, lacrosse, and flag). First year I invested a ton of money in lax gear. He hated it. He hated it because he was not as good as many of the other kids. He hated it because he was not as coordinated and the sport is very technical. He would sometimes cry on the way to games. He ended up loving lacrosse and made the travel team. the first summer of travel he fractured his toe. He was crying and crying that he could not play lax for a few weeks. He then was laughing at himself that he used to wish he would break his leg so he did not have to play.
Similar thing happened when he started basketball. He actually cried in the middle of the game beucase he kept on double dribbling and getting calls made on him. He had one game where he was on fire and scored. Ever since then his confidence went through the roof.
The reason I forced him is because I knew the ONLY reason he did not want to do the sports is because he lacked confidence and felt like he did not measure up. As he practiced and got better, he gained his confidence and now would be devastated if I made him opt out. I would not have forced him had he had other interests that took priority. I knew in my heart that he just needed to build his abilities and then he would be OK.
I'm not saying this is for everyone, but for me, as a parent, I will not nurture my kids fears and insecurities. I'm all about building confidence through accomplishments (not just by words and a "good job") and through them working hard and being proud of what they have done on their own. I think the sports and stick with it has served my formerly shy and insecure son well and helped turn him into a confident and proud young man.
Anonymous wrote:Tennis is great -- one private lesson on the weekend and your son will be fine to play on a team or with friends for fun. It's been amazing for my son, but you must have good hand/eye coordination.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I will admit that I did force my son to play sports, year round (basketball, lacrosse, and flag). First year I invested a ton of money in lax gear. He hated it. He hated it because he was not as good as many of the other kids. He hated it because he was not as coordinated and the sport is very technical. He would sometimes cry on the way to games. He ended up loving lacrosse and made the travel team. the first summer of travel he fractured his toe. He was crying and crying that he could not play lax for a few weeks. He then was laughing at himself that he used to wish he would break his leg so he did not have to play.
Similar thing happened when he started basketball. He actually cried in the middle of the game beucase he kept on double dribbling and getting calls made on him. He had one game where he was on fire and scored. Ever since then his confidence went through the roof.
The reason I forced him is because I knew the ONLY reason he did not want to do the sports is because he lacked confidence and felt like he did not measure up. As he practiced and got better, he gained his confidence and now would be devastated if I made him opt out. I would not have forced him had he had other interests that took priority. I knew in my heart that he just needed to build his abilities and then he would be OK.
I'm not saying this is for everyone, but for me, as a parent, I will not nurture my kids fears and insecurities. I'm all about building confidence through accomplishments (not just by words and a "good job") and through them working hard and being proud of what they have done on their own. I think the sports and stick with it has served my formerly shy and insecure son well and helped turn him into a confident and proud young man.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't play sports on HS, although I'm a girl not a boy, I always felt like I was on the outside. Like if I had a team sport life would just have been somehow easier. Or I would've made more friends or had more confidence. I probably use it as an excuse ....but I did grow up in a community where being an athlete just seemed to make you more accepted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you force it?
DS is in fencing. He is better with an individual sport instead of a team sport.
Same with my DS. He tried team sports and didn't like them so he started fencing at age 7 or 8 and loved it.
Fencing sounds like such a cool idea! How did he get started? My son is almost 13 and we live in DC.
He started with a Learn to Fence program and has done it twice weekly ever since. Looks like there are 2 fencing clubs in DC.
http://www.nationalcapitalfencersclub.com/
http://dcfencing.com/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you force it?
DS is in fencing. He is better with an individual sport instead of a team sport.
Same with my DS. He tried team sports and didn't like them so he started fencing at age 7 or 8 and loved it.
Fencing sounds like such a cool idea! How did he get started? My son is almost 13 and we live in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you force it?
DS is in fencing. He is better with an individual sport instead of a team sport.
Same with my DS. He tried team sports and didn't like them so he started fencing at age 7 or 8 and loved it.