Govs93 wrote:O-townClown wrote:Govs, big difference between quitting in-season and dropping the sport entirely. Sure sounds like you chose to play. Just not that day. I think your dad did the right thing, especially considering your reaction was emotional.
His kid has been going through the motions for a year and admitted he continues to play because he knows his father wants him to.
I would say that it sounds like the kid is going through the motions because other kids are improving their Wii skills and he's not keeping up. As parent, you know what's wrong and right, and I have no reason to believe that Looper is any different. The fact that he's even asking for some validation tells me that he does.
He doesn't want his son turning into a couch potato, despite the fact that he'd let himself if given the choice. Have you seen the graphics on Wii? what kid
wouldn't let himself turn into a couch potato?!
Dmom is probably on the right track... maybe you back off him a little bit. Don't send him to camps, cut back to a lower level so that he stays in and during the summer, introduce him to golf, or baseball, or have him take a video game design class at the Science Museum... Just cut back the hockey workload.
About 4 times today I composed an email then deleting it as I didn't want to be offensive. I know this is serious and I fear it too in my household.
However, each email was more along Gov's line.
What's he going to do with his time?
I'd offer some options like: FT Mathnasium, Piano Lessons, Basketball and many others. He must promise to offset his non hockey time with something else positive! ( a little sarcasm as some of you just dont' get that stuff)
Get rid of the Wii, cable and computer. Not as punishment, tell him times are tough and they broke.
My guess whether you see it or not, how's his schooling doing?
Does his mom complain all the time in front of him about "all this hockey" in a negative tone?
Buy some Wild season tickets, get tickets to the Wrigley outdoor hockey game this winter, watch Rudy and Miracle. Take every opportunity to teach him the joy of competition. Balance this of course with other opportunities just in case the plan doesn't work.
I know your a good father. I'll be crushed if (and possibly when) my kid does this. Let's be honest, it'll happen to most of our kids at some time or another. With your family it's just happening alot sooner.
I'm really curious on the wife question though?
So I go back to the serious stuff, make sure there's something productive in place of hockey vs blindly agreeing to his wish.
Maybe he'll be a great golfer, a 4.0 student, a great guitar player or something else wonderful. It's not hockey and it's not Wii, help him find his greatness!