Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.
I've only seen 2 noticable occurences at my kids sporting events and my kids have graduated from hs. I don't think it's the norm in Northern Va. Also people think the alcohol doesn't affect them but it does and being around drunk adults is gross.
I realized one mom I had gotten close to in the season after t ball was an alcoholic. She convinced other parents to get drunk during the team practices. Her thing was vodka. After the first week we had parents who could not walk. Funny thing about her she was trying to start up a health related business and was trying to bring her company into our school system. She's very loud and vocal about health but was the biggest fake I've ever seen. Nothing about this woman was healthy other than she was thin because she drank instead of eating.
The other occurrence was at an away tennis match. A rude couple who had a freshman on the team and who rarely came to matches left during the matches to go to a restaurant near the court and came back trashed. They, like the other mom, were nasty people.
I don't drink a lot so I don't get it but why do people who get drunk stink? They don't realize it and it's one of the things that makes it more disgusting.
Funny, because we are in NoVa and our experience with the drinking was that it was completely prevalent in baseball. It started on the rec team but the travel teams...yowza...they were outta control. Anyway we're done with it now, thank goodness.
We never really saw drinking in other sports except there was one mom on one of our boy's rec league basketball teams. Like you say about the people you observed, she was an alcoholic. She even came to 9am games with a travel mug with hooch in her coffee. She was functioning but you could smell the alcohol on her breath. It was really, really sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand. A game is a couple of hours, you can’t last through that without a drink at a children’s event?
Or if you have a series of games, you should be hydrating because you will be outside for a long time and driving frequently.
That’s what I was thinking. I can imagine having some parents / players over after a game or tournament- but not being able to make it 2-3 hours without alcohol? That shocks me. I sure as heck wouldn’t be carpooling with those parents.
Do they think it’s cute or funny? It makes me think they are alcoholics.
Where do you get that people "can't make it" 2-3 hours? without alcohol? That's a massive and unsupported inference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.
Most sports are boring but baseball takes it to a whole new level.The level of drinking we see at my nephew's games is totally understandable. The games are like watching paint dry!
My kid is 14, plays travel baseball. I’ve never seen anyone drink, but I also don’t pay attention. And people, that is the key to enjoying baseball! It is two hours (or five hours, like yesterday’s double header) or zen. You empty your mind. Watch the clouds. Listen to the breeze in the trees. Look at the bugs crawling on a leaf. After a week of Zoom meetings and whatnot baseball is my favorite time of the week.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of secret drinkers in the suburbs. "Wine mom" is real, that's how it became a meme. These moms just put the wine in a coffee mug or thermos to hide it. Or they drink with their mom friends, so they're not doing it alone. I can spot these moms a mile away as the child of an alcoholic. I know how to spot the signs. I just feel sorry for them because they are in denial that they have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.
I've only seen 2 noticable occurences at my kids sporting events and my kids have graduated from hs. I don't think it's the norm in Northern Va. Also people think the alcohol doesn't affect them but it does and being around drunk adults is gross.
I realized one mom I had gotten close to in the season after t ball was an alcoholic. She convinced other parents to get drunk during the team practices. Her thing was vodka. After the first week we had parents who could not walk. Funny thing about her she was trying to start up a health related business and was trying to bring her company into our school system. She's very loud and vocal about health but was the biggest fake I've ever seen. Nothing about this woman was healthy other than she was thin because she drank instead of eating.
The other occurrence was at an away tennis match. A rude couple who had a freshman on the team and who rarely came to matches left during the matches to go to a restaurant near the court and came back trashed. They, like the other mom, were nasty people.
I don't drink a lot so I don't get it but why do people who get drunk stink? They don't realize it and it's one of the things that makes it more disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:No. But I've wanted to given how some of the games go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand. A game is a couple of hours, you can’t last through that without a drink at a children’s event?
Or if you have a series of games, you should be hydrating because you will be outside for a long time and driving frequently.
That’s what I was thinking. I can imagine having some parents / players over after a game or tournament- but not being able to make it 2-3 hours without alcohol? That shocks me. I sure as heck wouldn’t be carpooling with those parents.
Do they think it’s cute or funny? It makes me think they are alcoholics.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand. A game is a couple of hours, you can’t last through that without a drink at a children’s event?
Or if you have a series of games, you should be hydrating because you will be outside for a long time and driving frequently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.
Most sports are boring but baseball takes it to a whole new level.The level of drinking we see at my nephew's games is totally understandable. The games are like watching paint dry!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.
The level of drinking we see at my nephew's games is totally understandable. The games are like watching paint dry!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious. Seems like many weekend games the parents on the sidelines have beers in cozies or thermos with wine. My DS plays hockey and baseball.
Baseball is the worst. We were soooooo happy when our sons dropped baseball. The parents drinking started with tee ball and got worse as the kids got older. I hated going to games because of the parent drinking.