The thin line between teaching perseverance and pushing too much
At first, let me make it clear: you should never force children
to practice a sport or an activity that they don't like neither
to force them to go beyond where they are willing to go.
Sounds obvious like that but it is scary how many parents I saw
in my career that where seeing their son or daughter as the
winner they never were or as the champion that they always
wished to be. Do not forget: YOU ARE NOT DOING THE SPORT, YOUR
KID IS!
Oh, we all know some success stories about a young gymnast who
made it to the Olympics or a tennis player who turned pro early
despite their tyrannical parents. But for 1 kid who made it, how
many childhoods were broken? Thousands? Tens of thousands? Let
kids be kids. If your kid is good and has the talent and the
mind to go far, he will, with or without you. When I am talking
to parents, I always say: "It is tough for a parent to help
their kids to achieve success while it is so easy to make them
fail!" Let me refer to the Issue #1 of Sports & Kids Newsletter
for a humoristic but very true list of some "Don't". Now, you
will ask me: "Ok Mario, that is nice, do not push your children.
Yeah, yeah! But I don't want my son or daughter to be a quitter,
to always look for the easy way out when things are tough." Yep,
you're right! You know the old saying: "When the going get
tough, the tough get going!" As parents we all want our kids to
be among the toughs. This is absolutely normal. But who said it
is easy to be a parent? ;-)
First, it depends on the age of the children. Between 3 and 5
years old, we usually decide where we sign them up. Sometimes,
if they have older brothers and sisters they might tell you: "I
wanna play soccer" or "I wanna do cartwheels like my sister" but
usually it is the parent's decision. We are usually influenced
by neighbors, family, and local publicity. And of course, since
it is our decision and not theirs, the chances to get it wrong
are larger. You have to watch carefully your kid's attitude. Do
not get too worried when they complain when you interrupt their
playing time to go the swimming lesson or the soccer game. It is
normal and usually has more to do with the fact that they have
to stop their actual playing. As soon as they realize that they
will be playing somewhere else they will be happy again. But if
they are still complaining even when they are practicing their
sport then you should start asking yourself questions. If it is
a fight every time, do not hesitate and try something else. Do
not wait too long. They will not become quitters at this time.
They just want to have fun at this age. Most organizations have
a refund policy, ask for it at the sign-up.
Older kids usually choose their activities. They are usually
influenced by friends or by something that caught their
attention on TV like in big events or professional sports
finals. Olympics have a big influence in sports recruiting. Most
sports represented in the Olympics know an increase in their
recruiting in an Olympic year. Even more when a local athlete
wins. For older kids that choose their own sport, make it clear
right at the beginning: "If you sign up, you stay until the end
of the season". This is called "keeping your engagements". It is
important that they learn to make the proper choices and assume
the responsibilities that go with it. Let's take a basketball
team for example. The kid signs up in a team with a limited
number of players. Maybe the organization even refused some
inscriptions because the team was full. If a player decides to
quit after 2 or 3 weeks because "he doesn't like it anymore" or
because "they lost the first 3 games", it is the whole team that
is affected by his decision. So think about your choice and keep
your word. If you think you didn't make the right choice then do
not reenter yourself at the next session.