Anonymous wrote:I’ve definitely met some crazy swim parents who were college athletes. As a whole, they are also just more stealth about it - sit together, know the coaches, sometimes get special treatment/access to best groups, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents were probably competitive HS or college swimmers themselves and are trying to relive their glory days.
I doubt it. Every friend and family me ever I know that is a D1 athlete is the opposite with their kids. Encouraging multiple sports and pretty chill. Those people know the burn out and how tough it is and swim is incredibly tough. Early morning practice up and down a lane. It is not like team sports where there is a lot of camaraderie on and off the field.
My girlfriend was a D1 swimmer and has some incredible athletes. Their kids all play multiple sports and with swim in particular they don't rush technical improvements because she says they will need those tweaks in the coming years so they don't plateau for long periods of time. She also points out the kids that will likely not make it to swim in college because they have the parents making them cry on deck.
+1
^this- former athletes are usually the most laid back sport athletes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents were probably competitive HS or college swimmers themselves and are trying to relive their glory days.
I doubt it. Every friend and family me ever I know that is a D1 athlete is the opposite with their kids. Encouraging multiple sports and pretty chill. Those people know the burn out and how tough it is and swim is incredibly tough. Early morning practice up and down a lane. It is not like team sports where there is a lot of camaraderie on and off the field.
My girlfriend was a D1 swimmer and has some incredible athletes. Their kids all play multiple sports and with swim in particular they don't rush technical improvements because she says they will need those tweaks in the coming years so they don't plateau for long periods of time. She also points out the kids that will likely not make it to swim in college because they have the parents making them cry on deck.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a really long post and you seem very interested in that family. Perhaps you need to take a breath and try to understand why this is occupying your thoughts.
Does it suck for the kid? Sure. But everyone has their own parenting style.
Op here. It is actually three or four families that my swimmer is around. I blended and gave just a few odd details. I am not from the US and this parenting style seems peculiar and for lack of a better term foreign.
My swimmer is in the same group and has always been close in times but this season is besting these swimmers (new height). They are pushing private coaching, camps, etc. on us. I am not interested and if my swimmer expresses interest we will look into it.
What is the end game? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents were probably competitive HS or college swimmers themselves and are trying to relive their glory days.
I doubt it. Every friend and family me ever I know that is a D1 athlete is the opposite with their kids. Encouraging multiple sports and pretty chill. Those people know the burn out and how tough it is and swim is incredibly tough. Early morning practice up and down a lane. It is not like team sports where there is a lot of camaraderie on and off the field.
My girlfriend was a D1 swimmer and has some incredible athletes. Their kids all play multiple sports and with swim in particular they don't rush technical improvements because she says they will need those tweaks in the coming years so they don't plateau for long periods of time. She also points out the kids that will likely not make it to swim in college because they have the parents making them cry on deck.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a really long post and you seem very interested in that family. Perhaps you need to take a breath and try to understand why this is occupying your thoughts.
Does it suck for the kid? Sure. But everyone has their own parenting style.
Op here. It is actually three or four families that my swimmer is around. I blended and gave just a few odd details. I am not from the US and this parenting style seems peculiar and for lack of a better term foreign.
My swimmer is in the same group and has always been close in times but this season is besting these swimmers (new height). They are pushing private coaching, camps, etc. on us. I am not interested and if my swimmer expresses interest we will look into it.
What is the end game? What am I missing?
The end game was often D1 swimming but there isn’t much money there and they are now taking fewer swimmers so competition is fierce. They have to love it or they won’t last.
I have an 18 yr old high school senior who will swim in college. At about 16, you start to see the serious kids burn out or get injured. Many of these swimmers are battling constant injury. Overuse injuries are serious and career ending. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. Let them rest when they need it.
In our case, the end game was to help a seriously hyperactive kid get the energy out, set goals, stay focused on school/swim and have some assistance in the college application process.
The more they swim, the less time they have to study and for many, AP classes and swim are tough to balance but it can be done. It is not easy. The pressure in 10th and 11th is high.
Our son was recruited despite injuries and will be attending a school beyond his expected reach academically had he not been swimming. Don’t get me wrong - he’s in range but schools with sun 15 % acceptance rates are reaches for everyone.
The college process can be much easier as an athlete (not less work but more transparent). I’m grateful for that.
My one regret was that we didn’t really miss meets or practice (unless sick). We skipped trips and parties to prioritize swimming. Looking back, those non-swim events would have helped create more balance and would not have negatively impacted the overall outcome. One bad meet or one bad season will not matter that much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cell phones have also not helped the hyper parents. I see so many of them taping all of their kids races. I really hope these kids aren’t doing film and stroke technique sessions at home
My kids love watching their own videos. I stopped doing it for a while and they complained. But I don’t try to give them tips based on the videos.
+1. My swimmers want to watch their races. We aren’t doing post event lectures lol
+ another. When I’m working the meet, my swimmer (who is older) still asks, “but who will video my races?” We don’t see it as any different than filming our children’s dance or theatre performances.
Anonymous wrote:Cell phones have also not helped the hyper parents. I see so many of them taping all of their kids races. I really hope these kids aren’t doing film and stroke technique sessions at home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a really long post and you seem very interested in that family. Perhaps you need to take a breath and try to understand why this is occupying your thoughts.
Does it suck for the kid? Sure. But everyone has their own parenting style.
Op here. It is actually three or four families that my swimmer is around. I blended and gave just a few odd details. I am not from the US and this parenting style seems peculiar and for lack of a better term foreign.
My swimmer is in the same group and has always been close in times but this season is besting these swimmers (new height). They are pushing private coaching, camps, etc. on us. I am not interested and if my swimmer expresses interest we will look into it.
What is the end game? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:
I understand that the DMV is very competitive - parents here hire tutors for everything, take prep classes for every standardize test, get private coaching, specialized sport camps, etc. On the academic front it makes sense, you want your kid to understand/know material, succeed, do well in college, etc. But I am having a tougher time understanding the same mentality with sports and swim in particular (where it is not subjective but time based with motivational standard to show where a swimmer falls in speed/talent).
We know some families that spend a lot of resources on private coaching and camps every year for their swimmers. They push the head coach to focus on their swimmers' needs. The kids are good (mostly AA times and some AAA times) although the one it very much appears is peaking and being surpassed by peers that have not swam as long. They used to have a lot of success because of all the private instruction at a very young age. Now their peers are reaching the same skill level. You see the kid cry a lot with the parents, and it very much appears the parents are VERY hard on the swimmers and coaching their swimmers a lot (not swimmers themselves). It has been overheard the constant critiques about what the swimmer did wrong in the water.
I want to understand this parent. Is the goal to have a D1 swimmer? The scholarship money in no way equals the resources spent to perfect the strokes since the swimmer was 8. Is playing a sport in college that important to lifelong success?
Do you think you have an Olympian on your hand and this could be a life long career? I don't understand it. Do you not realize that they could burn out, hate it, opt to quit because of the pressure? Or they will be done in high school or college and never swim again?
What does this parent think swimming for their child means? It very much appears the parent is "living" through their child since they were not swimmers themselves. I guess I really and truly do not understand what the thought process is here.