MAKING THE BEST OUT OF YOUTH SPORTS
Dr. Alan Goldberg
If you want your child to come out
of his youth sports experience a winner (feeling good about him and having a
healthy attitude towards sports), then he needs your help! You are a vital and
important part of the coach-athlete-parent team. If you do your job correctly
and play your position well, then your child will learn the sport faster,
perform better, really have fun and have his self-esteem enhanced as a result.
His sport experience will serve as a positive model for him to follow as he
approaches other challenges and obstacles throughout life. If you "drop the
ball" or run the wrong way with it, your child will stop learning,
experience performance difficulties and blocks, and begin to really hate the
sport. And that's the good news! Further, your relationship with him will
probably suffer significantly. As a result, he will come out of this experience
burdened with feelings of failure, inadequacy and low self-esteem, feelings that
will generalize to other areas in his life. Your child and his coach need you on
the team. They can't win without you! The following are a list of useful facts,
guidelines and strategies for you to use to make you more skilled in the youth
sport game. Remember no wins unless everyone wins. We need you on the team!
STEP ONE When defined the right way, competition in youth sports is both good and
healthy and teaches children a variety of important life skills. The word
"compete" comes from the Latin words "com" and "petere"
which mean together and seeking respectively. The true definition of competition
is a seeking together where your opponent is your partner, not the enemy! The
better he performs, the more chance you have of having a peak performance.
Sports is about learning to deal with challenges and obstacles. Without a worthy
opponent, without any challenges sports is not so much fun. The more the
challenge the better the opportunity you have to go beyond your limits. World
records are consistently broken and set at the Olympics because the best
athletes in the world are "seeking together", challenging each other
to enhanced performance. Your child should never be taught to view his opponent
as the "bad guy", the enemy or someone to be hated and
"destroyed". Do not model this attitude! Instead, talk to/make friends
with parents of your child's opponent. Root for great performances, good plays,
not just for the winner! STEP TWO The ultimate goal of the sport experience is to challenge oneself and
continually improve. Unfortunately, judging improvement by winning and losing is
both an unfair and inaccurate measure. Winning in sports is about doing the best
you can do, seperate from the outcome or the play of your opponent. Children
should be encouraged to compete against their own potential (i.e., Peter and
Patty Potential). That is, the boys should focus on beating "Peter",
competing against themselves, while the girls challenge "Patty". When
your child has this focus and plays to better himself instead of beating someone
else, he will be more relaxed, have more fun and therefore perform better. STEP THREE A corollary to TWO, one of the main purposes of the youth sports experience
is skill acquisition and mastery. When a child performs to his potential and
loses it is criminal to focus on the outcome and become critical. If a child
plays his very best and loses, you need to help him feel like a winner!
Similarly, when a child or team performs far below their potential but wins,
this is not cause to feel like a winner. Help your child make this important
separation between success and failure and winning and losing. Remember, if you
define success and failure in terms of winning and losing, you're playing a
losing game with your child! STEP FOUR Your role on the parent-coach-athlete team is as a Support player with a
capital S! You need to be your child's best fan. unconditionally! Leave the
coaching and instruction to the coach. Provide encouragement, support, empathy,
transportation, money, help with fund-raisers, etc., but... do not coach! Most
parents that get into trouble with their children do so because they forget to
remember the important position that they play. Coaching interferes with your
role as supporter and fan. The last thing your child needs and wants to hear
from you after a disappointing performance or loss is what they did technically
or strategically wrong. Keep your role as a parent on the team separate from
that as coach, and, if by necessity you actually get stuck in the almost no-win
position of having to coach your child, try to maintain this separation of roles
(i.e. on the deck, field or court say, "Now I'm talking to you as a
coach", at home say, "Now I'm talking to you as a parent"). Don't
parent when you coach and don't coach at home when you're supposed to be
parenting. STEP FIVE It's a time proven principle of peak performance that the more fun an athlete
is having, the more they will learn and the better they will perform. Fun must
be present for peak performance to happen at every level of sports from youth to
world class competitor! When a child stops having fun and begins to dread
practice or competition, it's time for you as a parent to become concerned! When
the sport or game becomes too serious, athletes have a tendency to burn out and
become susceptible to repetitive performance problems. An easy rule of thumb: If
your child is not enjoying what they are doing, nor loving the heck out of it,
investigate! What is going on that's preventing them from having fun? Is it the
coaching? The pressure? Is it you?! Keep in mind that being in a highly
competitive program does not mean that there is no room for fun. The child that
continues to play long after the fun is going will soon become a drop out
statistic. STEP SIX FIVE leads us to a very important question! Why is your child participating
in the sport? Are they doing it because they want to, for them, or because of
you. When they have problems in their sport do you talk about them as
"our" problems, "our jump isn't high enough", "we're
having trouble with our flip turn" , etc. Are they playing because they
don't want to disappoint you, because they know how important the sport is to
you? Are they playing for rewards and "bonuses" that you give out? Are
their goals and aspirations yours or theirs? How invested are you in their
success and failure? If they are competing to please you or for your vicarious
glory they are in it for the wrong reasons! Further, if they stay involved for
you, ultimately everyone will lose. It is quite normal and healthy to want your
child to excel and be as successful as possible. But, you cannot make this
happen by pressuring them with your expectations or by using guilt or bribery to
keep them involved. If they have their own reasons and own goals for
participating, they will be far more motivated to excel and therefore far more
successful. STEP SEVEN Do not equate your child's self-worth and lovability with his performance.
The most tragic and damaging mistake I see parents continually make is punishing
a child for a bad performance by withdrawing emotionally from him. A child loses
a race, strikes out or misses and easy shot on goal and the parent responds with
disgust, anger and withdrawal of love and approval. CAUTION: Only use this
strategy if you want to damage your child emotionally and ruin your relationship
with him. In the 1988 Olympics, when Greg Louganis needed and got a perfect 10
on his last dive to overtake the Chinese diver for the gold medal, his last
thought before he went was, "If I don't make it, my mother will still love
me". STEP EIGHT Athletes of all ages and levels perform in direct relationship to how they
feel about themselves. When your child is in an athletic environment that boosts
his self-esteem, he will learn faster, enjoy himself more and perform better
under competitive pressure. One thing we all want as children and never stop
wanting is to be loved and accepted, and to have our parents feel good about
what we do. This is how self-esteem gets established. When your interactions
with your child make him feel good about himself, he will, in turn, learn to
treat himself this very same way. This does not mean that you have to
incongruently compliment your child for a great effort after they have just
performed miserably. In this situation being empathic and sensitive to his
feelings is what's called for. Self esteem makes the world go round. Make your
child feel good about himself and you've given him a gift that lasts a lifetime.
Do not interact with your child in a way that assaults his self-esteem by
degrading, embarrassing or humiliating him. If you continually put your child
down or minimize his accomplishments not only will he learn to do this to
himself throughout his life, but he will also repeat your mistake with his
children! STEP NINE If you really want your child to be as happy and as successful as possible in
everything that he does, teach him how to fail! The most successful people in
and out of sports do two things differently than everyone else. First,, they are
more willing to take risks and therefore fail more frequently. Second, they use
their failures in a positive way as a source of motivation and feedback to
improve. Our society is generally negative and teaches us that failure is bad, a
cause for humiliation and embarrassment, and something to be avoided at all
costs. Fear of failure or humiliation causes one to be tentative and non-active.
In fact, most performance blocks and poor performances are a direct result of
the athlete being preoccupied with failing or messing up. You can't learn to
walk without falling enough times. Each time that you fall your body gets
valuable information on how to do it better. You can't be successful or have
peak performances if you are concerned with losing or failing. Teach your child
how to view setbacks, mistakes and risk-taking positively and you'll have given
him the key to a lifetime of success. Failure is the perfect Stepping stone to
success. STEP TEN Many parents directly or indirectly use guilt and threats as a way to
"motivate" their child to perform better. Performance studies clearly
indicate that while threats may provide short term results, the long term costs
in terms of psychological health and performance are devastating. Using fear as
a motivator is probably one of the worst dynamics you could set up with your
child. Threats take the fun out of performance and directly lead to your child
performing terribly. implicit in a threat, (do this or else!) is your own
anxiety that you do not believe the child is capable. Communicating this lack of
belief, even indirectly is further devastating to the child's performance. A
challenge does not entail loss or negative consequences should the athlete fail.
Further, implicit in a challenge is the empowering belief, "I think that
you can do it". STEP ELEVEN When athletes choke under pressure and perform far below their potential, a
very common cause of this is a focus on the outcome of the performance (i.e.,
win/lose, instead of the process). In any peak performance, the athlete is
totally oblivious to the outcome and instead is completely absorbed in the here
and now of the actual performance. An outcome focus will almost always distract
and tighten up the athlete insuring a bad performance. Furthermore focusing on
the outcome, which is completely out of the athlete's control will raise his
anxiety to a performance inhibiting level. So if you truly want your child to
win, help get his focus away from how important the contest is and have them
focus on the task at hand. Supportive parents de-emphasize winning and instead
stress learning the skills and playing the game. STEP TWELVE Supportive parents do not use other athletes that their child competes
against to compare and thus evaluate their child's progress. Comparisons are
useless, inaccurate and destructive. Each child matures differently and the
process of comparison ignores significant distorting effects of developmental
differences. For example, two 12 year old boys may only have their age in
common! One may physically have the build and perform like a 16 year old while
the other, a late developer, may have the physical size and attribute of a 9
year old. Performance comparisons can prematurely turn off otherwise talented
athletes on their sport. The only value of comparisons is in teaching. If one
child demonstrates proper technique, that child can be used comparatively as a
model only! For your child to do his very best he needs to learn to stay within
himself. Worrying about how another athlete is doing interferes with him doing
this. STEP THIRTEEN The sports media in this country would like you to believe that sports and
winning/losing is larger than life. The fact that it is just a game frequently
gets lost in translation. This lack of perspective frequently trickles down to
the youth sport level and young athletes often come away from competition with a
distorted view of themselves and how they performed. Parents need to help their
children develop realistic expectations about themselves, their abilities and
how they played, without robbing the child of his dreams. Swimming a lifetime
best time and coming in dead last is a cause for celebration, not depression.
Similarly, losing the conference championships does not mean that the sun will
not rise tomorrow.
ENCOURAGE YOUR CHILD TO COMPETE AGAINST HIMSELF
DO NOT DEFINE SUCCESS AND FAILURE IN TERMS OF WINNING AND LOSING
BE SUPPORTIVE, DO NOT COACH!
HELP MAKE THE SPORT FUN FOR YOUR CHILD
WHOSE GOAL IS IT?
YOUR CHILD IS NOT HIS PERFORMANCE-LOVE HIM UNCONDITIONALLY
REMEMBER THE IMPORTANCE OF SELF-ESTEEM IN ALL OF YOUR INTERACTIONS WITH YOUR
CHILD-ATHLETE
GIVE YOUR CHILD THE GIFT OF FAILURE
CHALLENGE, DON'T THREATEN
STRESS PROCESS, NOT OUTCOME
AVOID COMPARISONS AND RESPECT DEVELOPMENTAL DIFFERENCES
TEACH YOUR CHILD TO HAVE A PERSPECTIVE ON THE SPORTS EXPERIENCE