I just thought this was a good piece for all parents to read, for all those who know they might someday be parents, for all younger people who have ever felt too busy and too pressured. Being a parent is a tough job. We can easily feel like we're not doing all we can or should be doing. But there are times, too, when you just have to step back. Read on:
"Are we, as a nation, making childhood too stressful for millions of kids?
Are we cramming them into too many after-school activities without an eye toward what lessons they'll learn about themselves?
Have we forgotten what childhood can and should be like?
These are just a few of
the big existential worries that spiral out of a simple-sounding
question millions of parents ask ourselves: What activities should my
children be involved in?
Josh Levs
As a dad to two young
boys, I'm quickly learning what so many parents already know: It's
stressful territory that involves a tough balancing act.
But recently, standing
before a large crowd, I had a realization that now serves as my
guidepost, and that I hope will help others.
What if your kid's a budding prodigy?
Good parents want to help
our kids learn skills, gain confidence, find interests and try new
things. When they're young, it's easy to want to give them every
opportunity.
But that's impossible, not to mention expensive.
One of my boys has
drummed to the beat since he was a baby, so I'm looking into drum
lessons. The other can't stop dancing, so maybe he'll take dance
lessons. Both love playing catch with me. Tee ball time?
The oldest, in kindergarten, chose tennis lessons. And they both love their swim lessons.
The possibilities are endless.
What if one is meant to
be a pole vaulting chess prodigy, and the other's an Olympic gymnast who
paints masterpieces? How will they know if we don't introduce them to
all these things?
And so the spiraling begins, which helps lead some parents to sign our kids up for too many activities.
There are studies saying the "overscheduled child" is a "myth," but those are about generation-wide statistics. The fact remains that some kids are kept far too busy.
"Parents need to teach their kids to balance human doing with human being," said clinical psychologist Paula Bloom.
Parents need to teach their kids to balance human doing with human being.
Paula Bloom, clinical psychologist
Paula Bloom, clinical psychologist
Kids need to know
they're not defined by what they do, she said. They need time to play,
experiment, rest and figure out who they are.
"As parents, we've got
to get over our anxiety that we're not doing enough. Creating a sense of
safety, helping kids have confidence to try certain things, those are
the things that matter."
As kids get older, they'll show you more and more what they're interested in, Bloom notes.
And, yes, we all make mistakes.
"As adults, your kids
are going to tell their therapists, 'Oh my parents never let me play
piano,' or some other activity. It's going to happen. Being able to
tolerate that is really important."
League sports for little kids?
Many of my kids' friends
started soccer leagues at age 3. My wife and I asked ourselves: Do we
want our boys to be the only ones without soccer skills? We want them to
know they can do anything and to join the camaraderie.
But on top of their
other activities, our kids have religious education one weekend morning.
Soccer would mean not a single morning all week to relax at home,
unstructured.
A great dad I know, a
personal trainer (full disclosure: mine) who works regularly with teen
athletes, is vehemently against kids entering sports leagues before
they're about age 11 or 12.
Adults are "trying to
instill grown-up values and competitive nature on a kid, and they're
nowhere near that yet," said Robert Stephens. "They're trying to make
them into world champions. That's nuts!"
Adults are trying to instill grown-up values and competitive nature on a kid.
Robert Stephens, trainer
Robert Stephens, trainer
Stephens, who along with his wife raised two boys, wants kids to start playing neighborhood pickup games again.
"It teaches them how to regulate themselves, make up rules," and fix problems, he said.
But these days, that rarely happens. And as CNN has reported, league sports are helping fill a vacuum and keep many kids active.
Your advice
In a Facebook discussion, some parents said their kids' sports leagues are mostly about having fun.
Dawn Ladd said her 6-year-old daughter's soccer league is "organized, but obviously not competitive."
Still, many parents say leagues aren't right for their little ones.
"We tried... and it was
awful. What 4-year-old is ready?" asks Christina Comstock. She now
limits her son's activities to scouts and karate. #kids
Many parents wrote that two activities at a time is their maximum. But others have seen their children thrive on busy schedules.
My colleague Jo Parker's
two children have done ballet for years. Her 12-year-old daughter goes
five days a week. Cutting back might make the family's life easier,
Parker said. "But she loves it too much!"
Ultimately, it's up to each family.
"There's no decision tree," said Bloom, no "perfect cocktail."
There is, however, a critical element that often falls to the wayside: the family's overall lifestyle.
"There are families with
so much stress because all weekend they're traveling to games. We don't
let our kids drive all the decisions in our families. They don't have
to drive extracurricular decisions," Bloom said.
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And many parents get so
busy with kids' activities that they let their marriages falter, she
said. "Parents need to ask themselves: What are you modeling for your
kid?"
The realization
I was standing in front of hundreds of teenagers when I realized something about raising my own kids.
It was a keynote address to the Hugh O'Brian Youth Leadership (HOBY) World Leadership Congress. My message was to "be the cups and ice," my way of saying you should chase and maximize all your opportunities to achieve dreams and to "shine" by being unique, following your instincts.
As I looked out at these
kids from all over the world who have stepped up in their communities
and shown great potential, it struck me that I couldn't care less
whether they can run an 8-minute mile, play the violin, or set up a
tent.
I care that they know
they can achieve anything, that they understand big rewards come from
perseverance and hard work, that they treat others as they'd want to be
treated.
I care that they fill their lives with positivity, love and friendship, and take time for those things.
I realized I had gotten caught up in the means, not the end.
It isn't about a search
for the perfect activities. My role as a parent is to help guide my kids
to that good place. And there are plenty of ways to get there."
"Give me 6 hours to chop down a tree, and I will spend the first four sharpening the ax."--Abraham Lincoln.
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