Anonymous wrote:Your kid is 7. Is he or she a year round swimmer? It sounds like s/he is not if you're new to this. Chill and have fun. If your kid likes it and likes to go to practice, be happy!
If you're new to a summer team, there may have been a few kids at the meet/time trials who weren't at summer practice or who were swimming up during summer practice because they already know the strokes or are so much faster than their age group.
Let your kid beat his or her own times all season. Cheer on whatever improvement you see. I had a SLOW turtle at that age who took years decade to bloom -- but we all stuck with it because he LOVES swimming. Talk about a fabulous lifetime sport. He has always gotten more exercise at swim practice than he ever did at soccer or basketball.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Don't feel sad. We haven't said anything and are new at this. If it were a test at school, we would probably sit down with our kids to talk about it so wasn't sure if same approach applies here.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Don't feel sad. We haven't said anything and are new at this. If it were a test at school, we would probably sit down with our kids to talk about it so wasn't sure if same approach applies here.
Anonymous wrote:This thread make me really sad. I feel sorry for your 7 year old. I really do.
Anonymous wrote:
Think about it.
Competitive lap swimming is one of the most boring activities there is. You are literally going back and forth in an artificial chlorinated body of water. No change of scenery like in cross-country/sailing/motorcross/biking/hunting/eventing/climbing/hiking, no intense team moments like in other field sports or orchestra/chamber music, no uplifting music like in ballet/gym/music (duh), no cerebral excitement like in robotics/chess/debate, no communing with an animal like in horseback riding/showing. Nothing.
All these swim parents should apologize to their kids for making them participate in something so reductive and soul-crushing.
Anonymous wrote:Not totally sure what happened with DC, 7, tonight but he went from performing among top 3 swimmers in team to the bottom three.
Seemed very distracted. Thus far we've said nothing other then how did you feel about the meet, did you have fun etc. Should we say anything else?
Not clear if they are aware of poor performance and not sure if we should just ignore it altogether or ask if something was bothering them.
Anonymous wrote:As you are new to the sport it is understandable you have questions but please read all the comments. Swim is first and foremost fun, then it is good coaching and learning technique, then it is talent, and finally it is personal drive.
So, so many kids have it early and excel (one of mine did) but then growth spurts, physiology, other interests, burn out. My dc was beating your dc every day, every year until about 14. Your guy caught up, surpassed size, natural talent across the sports highly exhibited, and demonstrated drive to win and started beating mine. Both stayed friends and neither wanted to swim in college.
Have fun. My goal was always to look at his face after every heat. If he smiled, I smiled. If he was disappointed, I hugged and said not a word. I never recorded one race as I wanted to be in the moment. So many parents film it and never really just experience the race. It is really easy to get caught up in the swim culture as a parent. It is not good. At 7, you have no idea where his real talent, passion, drive lay.