Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want the admission's "leadership" bump from playing a key or leading role on a good team, but not necessarily the "athletics" bump of being a recruited athlete.
My kid does not want to play college soccer after talking to several other family members who did play D1 athletics and found it sort of a hit or miss experience.
Same experience in our household.
college soccer is a joke. If your child has (SERIOUS) talent send him/her to Europe. Whoever tells you the contrary is lying to you.
“Send turn to Europe” sounds easy but it’s not. Send them where? Who facilitates that?
Anonymous wrote:I want the admission's "leadership" bump from playing a key or leading role on a good team, but not necessarily the "athletics" bump of being a recruited athlete.
My kid does not want to play college soccer after talking to several other family members who did play D1 athletics and found it sort of a hit or miss experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:08:50 here. I didn’t give anything away, and I knew I’d get a response like this, anytime anyone posts anything remotely related to having a dream for their kid the criticism comes out. By they way, I don’t push her, she’s completely self motivated and I just pay for it.
The only dream any parent should have for their kid is that they grow up healthy and find the ability/opportunity to contribute doing something THEY love.
As a parent you simply offer them opportunities to experience, learn and grow from. Set healthy boundaries and support their goals and then stay out of their way.
+100
And a minority in the youth travel soccer world (esp prior to HS when parents are still delusional).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:08:50 here. I didn’t give anything away, and I knew I’d get a response like this, anytime anyone posts anything remotely related to having a dream for their kid the criticism comes out. By they way, I don’t push her, she’s completely self motivated and I just pay for it.
The only dream any parent should have for their kid is that they grow up healthy and find the ability/opportunity to contribute doing something THEY love.
As a parent you simply offer them opportunities to experience, learn and grow from. Set healthy boundaries and support their goals and then stay out of their way.
Anonymous wrote:08:50 here. I didn’t give anything away, and I knew I’d get a response like this, anytime anyone posts anything remotely related to having a dream for their kid the criticism comes out. By they way, I don’t push her, she’s completely self motivated and I just pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dream for my 13 YO DD is for her to play at a national level, don’t know what that is yet, maybe YNT? Maybe pro? College admission to a top university with scholarship would be icing on the cake and not my motivation for supporting her soccer dreams.
Well you outed yourself with the statement “My dream for my 13 YO DD”.
It HAS to be her dream, not yours. So, you are either a troll or terribly misguided.
Anonymous wrote:My dream for my 13 YO DD is for her to play at a national level, don’t know what that is yet, maybe YNT? Maybe pro? College admission to a top university with scholarship would be icing on the cake and not my motivation for supporting her soccer dreams.