Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the mouth of my now 19 yr old DS:
"you should've pushed me more and not let me quite xyz.. I would've been really good at it by now."
Yes, I rolled my eyes at him. But sounds like your DC might needs some therapy.
ymmv
We live in a competitive area where it is hard to make sports teams. If DS doesn’t keep playing, I’m not sure he will make the high school teams. I guess he has to want to actually play the sport to try out. He is probably good enough to make the golf and tennis teams as he is really good already. When he was so young, like 6 or 7, men on the golf course would comment what a great swing he had for a little kid. Same for tennis. Strangers would come up to us and tell us how good his swing was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the mouth of my now 19 yr old DS:
"you should've pushed me more and not let me quite xyz.. I would've been really good at it by now."
Yes, I rolled my eyes at him. But sounds like your DC might needs some therapy.
ymmv
We live in a competitive area where it is hard to make sports teams. If DS doesn’t keep playing, I’m not sure he will make the high school teams. I guess he has to want to actually play the sport to try out. He is probably good enough to make the golf and tennis teams as he is really good already. When he was so young, like 6 or 7, men on the golf course would comment what a great swing he had for a little kid. Same for tennis. Strangers would come up to us and tell us how good his swing was.
Anonymous wrote:From the mouth of my now 19 yr old DS:
"you should've pushed me more and not let me quite xyz.. I would've been really good at it by now."
Yes, I rolled my eyes at him. But sounds like your DC might needs some therapy.
ymmv
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - you honestly sound pretty pushy and that you have put a lot pressure on this child. I don't blame him for pushing back. This does sound unpleasant, especially given all that you have provided. However, it is not fair that you have put the burden of being the popular, smart, athletic golden child on him. Let him stop the sports. He will likely pick up one or two again.
Anonymous wrote:From the mouth of my now 19 yr old DS:
"you should've pushed me more and not let me quite xyz.. I would've been really good at it by now."
Yes, I rolled my eyes at him. But sounds like your DC might needs some therapy.
ymmv
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How’s his sleep?
I came here to ask the same question!
Sleep is the most important thing every child needs and most kids are sleep deprived.
Also, are there electronics in his bedroom?
Anonymous wrote:How’s his sleep?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with everyone's comments on the academic stuff and concerns about bullying.
But I need to add something as a parent of an athlete who has made plenty of mistakes myself: you need to let tennis go. Saying you won't let him forfeit and DH yelled at him after a match that he won? This is crazy. You are putting so much pressure on him to be a tennis player. It doesn't matter how good he is. He does not want to be a tennis player and he is telling you so. Let it go. You are choosing his potential success at tennis over your relationship with him and his potential success at life. I know you just want the best for him, but you're setting up a situation where to him it feels like his standing in the family and your love for him is based on whether or not he succeeds at tennis.
He's intentionally pulling away from that and you're failing his test by showing that your love is indeed conditional based on his success at tennis. This is hard to do, but there are good resources online to help yourself separate from all that as a parent- I like Coach Rebecca from Complete Performance and Coach Bre. Both have some good articles to help you unwind where you are with a sport vs. where your kid is.
I believe there are two weeks of tennis left. We are not planning to sign him up.
I asked about our summer and at this point, he doesn’t want to do anything. He said he would like to take some friends to our beach house.