a peek inside the fishbowl

23 Aug, 2006

I hate going to my kids soccer practice

Posted by andrea tomkins in: Misc. life

Okay, so maybe hate is a strong word. But I don’t always enjoy it very much. Tonight was different. It was Sarah’s last practice and the parents got on the field and we all played together: kids v. parents. That was fun. My shoe fell off at one point. The girls loved that.
  
What I hate most is the field we’ve been playing at. This is our third (?) year here. Emma has been playing at the JCC, where the soccer field is right next to a six-lane highway.  I’m not kidding.

the field
   
 
It’s loud. There is a constant drone of cars and trucks. I almost expect an 18-wheeler to barrel through the chain-link fence and the lilac trees hiding it.
  
Tonight was our last practice at the JCC. Then it’s time for the big tournament and soccer.is.over. I won’t really miss it.
  
I feel a pang when I watch Emma play soccer, a somewhat brackish feeling of anxiety, mixed with a healthy dose of déjà vu.
  
Here is a typical scene:
   
practice
   
As you see, I’ve marked her location in relation to her team. Every week it’s the same. She doesn’t really try. Her teammates chase the ball in a pack while she chases her teammates. I’ve seen her run. And she can RUN. But here, as you see in this picture, she’s not running. She’s jogging along like a flamingo in an onion patch. She doesn’t want to get in the middle of it for fear of getting hurt. She just doesn’t go for it.
  
Half the kids on her team are boys. They attack the ball with absolute ferociousness. They go for it all the time. They go for it with gusto. They slide and dive and fall. The ball hits them in the face. They get dirty. There are tears, sure, if an elbow meets an eye socket MAYBE, but not if the ball hits them in the arm.
  
I’m a bit of a yeller, I’m afraid. If I see she’s daydreaming I shout out to her. Not in a mean way. Okay, maybe I’ve been known to yell “wake up!” but I usually just call her name and tell her to go after the ball.
  
At the beginning of the year everyone was told to leave the coaching up to the coaches. So where does that leave me and my yelps of encouragement from the sidelines? Why aren’t the coaches prompting her a little more to get in on the action? Why do they let her gallop alongside? Is it because she’s seven? I already know the answer.
  
This also gets me thinking about the place of positive reinforcement in the parenting world. Is it wise to heap praise on kids for mediocre achievement? As parents we certainly want to encourage our kids, but what if they’re really not that good? And how can this affect a kid in the long term? Does it create a person with confidence or with a falsely over-inflated self-esteem?
  
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not disappointed in Emma’s anti-competitive spirit. I love her for her sensitive little soul. I just hope she eventually finds something she likes, something that she’s good at. Like I did with competitive swimming.
  
But as I watch her I can practically taste the awkwardness. It’s something about team sports. For me it was soccer and baseball. I played because my friends played, but I wasn’t ever good. It’s a familiar feeling – limbs akimbo – it’s as if your body is made of nothing but long arms and long legs and nothing works exactly like you want it too. Worse: your feet misbehave, and it’s almost as if you need to learn how to use your own body again. It’s the reason I always sucked at gymnastics.
  
Next year’s league is girl-only. I wonder if she’ll continue with soccer. If she does join, I wonder if (and how) it will be different.
  
Sarah is a different story. She likes to get in there. She attacks the ball. The look on her face is hilarious. I know she’s doing the “cheetah run,” as she calls it. She’s gritting her teeth and her eyes are focused and hard. She’ll tumble, and sometimes cry, but it doesn’t get her down.
  
These are two kids who share the same genes. They’re sisters who are only 23 months apart.. but they can be so different in so many ways. This never ceases to amaze me.

 


8 Responses to "I hate going to my kids soccer practice"

1 | Marla

August 23rd, 2006 at 9:32 pm

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I am not ready for team sports.

Our friends’ nine year old daughter decided she wanted to learn fencing. They, luckily, were able to find a class for her, and signed up her seven year old brother too. Holy heck, the kids love it, and they turned out to be GREAT at it. I don’t know what I’m saying here, but maybe it’s that it’s such a shame that soccer is so available, because there are so many other really really cool things kids should be exposed to, and they should be easier to find and try.

Me? Believe it or not, a gymnast for a bit. Then, something happened – I just felt…I don’t know…heavy. Not a fat kind of heavy – heavy as in clunky and leaden with weighted limbs. I then began to dislike the effort it all took, and then the fear of getting really really hurt doing flippy things over the horse. Same with ice skating – I just stopped feeling graceful. After ten badges, I quit.

Perhaps it’s growing – that you become self-conscious, and awkward for a bit, and it’s hard to let yourself go mentally enough to get lost in it. I’m sure she’ll find it in herself to adore something like you did with swimming. It’s a hard part of growing up.

2 | Scott

August 24th, 2006 at 10:09 am

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Hiya,

Good to see you the other day. I found myself wondering, though, how you knew it was us in the car ahead of you…

Anyhoo, I recently read a column in the Ottawa Sun that talks about parenting and sports (in this case, hockey). I grew up playing hockey and baseball and I thought that this column pretty much summed up how I would like to approach my kids’ sporting lives.

http://ottsun.canoe.ca/Sports/Columnists/Brennan_Don/2006/08/20/1766550-sun.html

Ciao for now.

3 | BeachMama

August 24th, 2006 at 11:05 am

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I have photos of my nephew at soccer this past spring. While the rest of his teammates were going for the ball, he was far behind, or sitting in the grass. He says he wants to play, but when he gets there he doesn’t.

I see no harm in cheering your kids on, I just have a hard time when the parents start yelling at the coaches and refs. Our eldest plays hockey and last season was terrible for parents in the stands.

4 | andrea

August 24th, 2006 at 12:29 pm

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Scott: I read the article, and I think it’s spot on. I will nod and smile and keep the encouragement quiet. But it’s so hard!! I want to help when I see her struggling. And I do so by reminding her to kick the ball with the inside of her foot etc etc.

*sigh*

Okay. Yes. Leave the coaching to the coaches.

5 | Suebob

August 24th, 2006 at 12:43 pm

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I think, at 7, just doing things, trying them out, seeing how new experiences are, is more important than doing them “right.” Kids are meant to play, which means something totally different for them than for adults.

6 | DavidR

August 24th, 2006 at 2:27 pm

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I played team sports all my life and I liked it… My spouse still plays soccer 2 times a week… I have also coached my sister. It was clear some kids didn’t like it and bluntly, I am not sure why their parents kept coming every saturday morning at 6h30am.

I agree with Suebob that just trying stuff is probalby the most important until she finds a passion. It could be guitar or piano or fishing…

as for myself, the kids are 3 and 1 so i’ll worry about it a bit later.

Cheers,
David

7 | twinmomplusone

August 24th, 2006 at 2:43 pm

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Oh Andrea, I had to laugh at that picture with that BIG arrow pointing at Emma. I laughed because my two girls are/were just like that. My 4.5 year old always wants to go play soccer, but when on the field hates the pushing and shoving to get the ball so she stands back and watches it all. And that’s in an all girl team (which is much better than those mixed leagues) Meanwhile her twin brother is super competitive and always on the ball scoring at least once at every game. At that age, our 12 year old would stand on the field picking flowers or chatting with the other girls or braiding their hair. Would drive my husband, the yeller, nuts. But somehow, she perservered and has played soccer for the past 8 years. She’s not the best and we never pushed her to be. We wanted her to have fun, see her friends during the summer and get some exercise. The key for us was that she at least participated in a team sport. Everything else (gymanstics, swimming, piano lessons, skiing was always an individual thing). And now, she actually has fun playing soccer and she’s not that bad at it.

I guess as parents, we want to expose our kids to a whole lot of opportunities and then decide according to their reaction to these whether to keep them going in it or not. Loved that article Scott referred to.

8 | DaniGirl

August 24th, 2006 at 2:46 pm

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I’ve managed to avoid the whole team sport thing so far, and if Beloved has his way, we will skip it entirely, but I think sports do have a certain merit. I wish I had played some as a child.

As long as Emma is playing because she wants to and not because she feels she has to, I think you’ll both be fine. And it was your last paragraph that drove me to comment. Yep, uh huh, yah. Totally get that bit.

BTW, you are BACK on my bloglines. Woot!

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My name is Andrea and I live in Ottawa with my husband Mark and our dog Sunny who is kind of a big deal on Instagram. During the day I work as a freelance writer. I am a longtime Ottawa blogger and I've occupied this little corner of the WWW since 1999. The Fishbowl is my whiteboard, water cooler, and journal, all rolled into one. I'm passionate about healthy living, arts and culture, travel, great gear, good food, and sharing the best of Ottawa. I also love vegetables, photography, gadgets, and great design.

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