Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's great, Larla; we'll have to find a pool so that you can continue to practice in the winter.
This, exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol, OP. She’s 8 and you’re already thinking of high school and college and beyond.
The poor kid.
So you never think about your children's future beyond tomorrow, even then they try to talk to you about it? That's weird. There's a difference between talk and pressure. I don't care if my kid never swims again. I thought she'd quit by now, to be honest, but she is obsessed with it and it's all she ever wants to do. She brought it up.
Anonymous wrote:“Woo hoo let’s see which city it will be at in 8 years so we can plan our travel! “
What is wrong with you people? The kid is 8. Make it a geography lesson. Have fun with it. Cheer her on. stop treating everything like a hopeless slog. The negativity is so strange to me.
And yes, you encourage kids’ big dreams. Not because you think they will end up on an Olympic platform. But because they will be encouraged to aim high and try new tough scary things and then as their dreams change as they mature (which will happen naturally) they will still believe they can achieve great things.
Anonymous wrote:I really wanted to swim in the Olympics at that age (reality: I was a mediocre division 3 swimmer, and I enthusiastically watch Olympic swimming as an adult)
Just tell her to keep working hard at improving her times and getting personal bests. And see where that goes.