Team sports versus team building debate splits household
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As parents, we want our kids to understand the value of being healthy and part of a team. Whether or not that includes organized team sports is up for discussion.
My family loves sharing sports. From watching the Super Bowl together to finding an obscure cycling race on TV,聽we enjoy the competitive spirit that sports bring to our home.聽However, just because we love sharing sports, doesn鈥檛 mean my husband and I are on the same page of the playbook when it comes to whether or not our sons should play team sports.
鈥淭here is no 鈥業鈥 in TEAM,鈥 is a phrase many team sports advocates seem to refer to as a positive reason for supporting kids in team sports. It supports the opportunities team sports provide to work together with others and look beyond yourself for the greater good of a larger group.
My husband Robert and I are facing off this month over team sports vs. team building activities for our kids, especially when it comes to our own sons.
I love sports. I love teams. Healthy bodies and minds and team building are all great with me, just not when they become a soul-crushing misery that causes a rift in the family.
I believe team building and character come in many forms that have nothing to do with taking a lap.
My husband鈥檚 concerns run deeper than just teamwork. Looking at his own family鈥檚 poor fitness and health, as an adult Robert became an avid sailor, runner, and surfer, and he has since failed to get any of our four sons into 鈥渉is sports.鈥
His fear for making sure our boys remain fit is a big driver for him to sign our sons up for team sports, perhaps hoping they will listen to a coach when they won鈥檛 listen to Papa.
Right now, my husband and I are debating about team sports specifically for our son Avery, 14. Avery is in the gifted programs in math and science, lean, ascetic, with shoulder length blond hair, and a passion for the video game League of Legends.
It seems that聽Robert鈥檚 MVP is our eldest son, Zoltan, 20, an A student and a crew team star for Virginia Commonwealth University. He runs 12 miles a day before dawn, rows 5K after that, works in a gym at VCU, and wins gold medals in national competitions.
However, I am quick to point out that there was a time during high school when Zoltan quit the rowing team and refused all other sports in favor of hanging out with friends, gaming, and girls.聽
Our next oldest son, Ian, 18, an Old Dominion University freshman, has trained in Gracie Jiu Jitsu since freshman year of high school.
He trains for seven hours a day now, and my husband still rolls his eyes saying, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a sport. There鈥檚 no team. There鈥檚 no cardio.鈥
Having trained myself in this sport, I would love to see my hubby on the mat with Ian for an hour and then tell us there鈥檚 no cardio involved.
Last fall, my husband once again morphed into Tiger Dad, put his foot down, and demanded that Avery and our youngest son Quin, 10, each join a team or have one picked for them.
A week later, Quin handed his father Lego League and Mathlete registration forms all filled out and asked for him to sign the permission slips.
The second Robert鈥檚 signatures were on the pages, Quin did a fist pump and said, 鈥淧lease note these are both teams. I鈥檒l be out on my bike. Later!鈥
It was very hard not to smirk as my spouse grumbled, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not what I meant.鈥
Avery picked rowing like his oldest brother and was happy doing the workouts and learning to use the oars for his tryout.
Then the coach informed him he was 鈥渢oo lightweight鈥 and not muscular enough for the task, but would be coxswain, the 鈥渂rains of the boat.鈥
Avery went to practice daily for a month. One day I arrived early to pick him up and saw that the team already had a coxswain his age.
That meant Avery was stuck sitting in the motor boat with coach, carrying the water bottles.
Still, I didn鈥檛 say anything, thinking he was 鈥減aying his dues鈥 and building character.
A week later, on the way to practice, he broke.
鈥淚鈥檓 mainly an A student. I play cello in the orchestra. I bike all the time. I read,鈥 he demanded. 鈥淲hy am I bothering when none of it counts?鈥
I think that the problem here for Avery is that there is no 鈥淚鈥 in his team sports experience.聽Sports should be an individual choice made by the child with parental coaching. It鈥檚 not a win if the player hates the game, the coaches, and him or herself for not succeeding.聽
I am continuing to help our sons look for team opportunities in both sport and other areas. I tell them daily that as a family we are a team. The goals are the same, even when the coaches disagree on the plays.聽