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    I dont care....

    Ive edited his original article to make it a bit more "family friendly"

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    I don't care if your eight year old can throw a baseball through six inches of plywood. He is not going to the pros. I don't care if your twelve-year-old scored seven touchdowns last week in Pop Warner. He is not going to the pros. I don't care if your sixteen -year-old made first team all-state in basketball. He is not playing in the pros. I don't care if your freshman in college is a varsity scratch golfer, averaging two under par. He isn't playing in the pros. Now tell me again how good he is. I'll lay you two to one odds right now - and I don't even know your kid, I have never even see them play - but I'll put up my pension that your kid is not playing in the pros. It is simply an odds thing. There are far too many variables working against your child. Injury, burnout, others who are better - these things are just a fraction of the barriers preventing your child from becoming "the one."

    So how do we balance being the supportive parent who spends three hours a day driving all over heaven's half acre to allow our child to pursue his or her dream without becoming the supportive parent that drives all over hell's half acre to allow our child to pursue OUR dream? When does this pursuit of athletic stardom become something just shy of a gambling habit? From my experience in the ER I've developed some insight in how to identify the latter.

    1. When I inform you as a parent that your child has just ruptured their ACL ligament or Achilles tendon, if the next question out of your mouth is, "How long until he or she will be able to play?" you have a serious problem.

    2. If you child is knocked unconscious during a soccer game and can't remember your name let alone my name but you feel it is a "vital" piece of medical information to let me know that he is a starting defender and that the team will probably lose now because he was taken out of the game, you need to see a counselor.

    3. If I tell you that mononucleosis has caused the spleen to swell and that participation in a contact sport could cause a life threatening rupture and bleeding during the course of the illness and you then ask me, "If we just get some extra padding around the spleen, would it be OK to play?" someone needs to hit you upside the head with a two by four.

    I bet you think I'm kidding about the above patient and parent interactions. I wish I were, but I'm not. These are a fraction of the things I have heard when it comes to children and sports. Every ER doctor in America sees this. How did we get here? How did we go from spending our family times in parks and picnics, at movies and relatives houses to travel baseball and cheerleading competitions? When did we go from being supportive to being subtly abusive?

    Why are we spending our entire weekends schlepping from county to county, town to town, state to state to play in some B.S. regional, junior, West Coast, invitational, elite, prep, all- state, conference, blah, blah, blah tourney? We decorate our cars with washable paint, streamers, numbers and names. We roll in little carpool caravans trekking down the interstate honking and waiving at each other like Rev. Jim Jones followers in a Kool-Aide line. Greyhounds, Hawks, Panthers, Eagles, Bobcats, Screaming Devils, Scorching Gonads or whatever other mascot adorns their jerseys.

    Somewhere along the line we got distracted, and the practice field became the dinner table of the new millennium. Instead of huddling around a platter of baked chicken, mashed potatoes and fruit salad, we spend our evenings handing off our children like 4 x 200 batons. From baseball practice to cheerleading, from swimming lessons to personal training, we have become the "hour-long" generation of five to six, six to seven, and seven to eight, selling the souls of our family for lacrosse try-outs. But why do we do this?

    It's because, just like everyone else, we're afraid. We are afraid that Emma will make the cheerleading squad instead of Suzy and that Mitch will start at first base instead of my Dillon. But it doesn't stop there. You see, if Mitch starts instead of Dillon then Dillon will feel like a failure, and if Dillon feels like a failure then he will sulk and cower in his room, and he will lose his friends because all his friends are on the baseball team, too, and if he loses his friends then he will start dressing in Goth duds, pierce his testicles, start using drugs and begin listening to headbanging music with his door locked. Then, of course, it's just a matter of time until he's surfing the net for neo-Nazi memorabilia, visiting gun shows and then opening fire in the school cafeteria. That is why so many fathers who bring their injured sons to the ER are so afraid that they won't be able to practice this week, or that he may miss the game this weekend. Miss a game, you become a mass murderer - it's that simple.

    Suzy is a whole other story, though. You see, if she doesn't make the cheerleading squad she will lose a whole bunch of friends and not be as popular as she should (and she's REAL popular). If she loses some friends, she will be devastated - all the cool kids will talk about her behind her back, so then she'll sit in her room all day, eating Ding Dongs and cutting at her wrists. Then, of course, it is only a matter of time until she is chatting on the Internet with fifty-year-old men and meeting up with them at truck stops. And that is why every mother is so frightened when her daughters have mononucleosis or influenza. Miss cheerleading practice for a week, and your daughter is headed for a career in porn. It's that simple.

    We have become a frightened society that can literally jump from point A to point Z and ignore everything in between. We spend so much time worrying about who might get ahead - and if we're falling behind - that we have simply lost our common sense. Myself included.

    There was a time when sick or injured children were simply sick or injured children. They needed bed rest, fluid, antibiotics and a limitation on activity. They just needed to get better. They didn't NEED to get better.

    I know, I know. Your family is different. You do all these things because your kid loves to compete, he loves the travel basketball, she loves the swim team, it's her life, it's what defines him. Part of that is certainly true but a big part of that isn't. Tens of thousands of families thrive in this setting, but I'm telling you, from what I've seen as a clinician, tens of thousands don't. It is a hidden scourge in society today, taxing and stressing husbands, wives, parents and children. We're denying children the opportunity to explore literally thousands of facets of interests because of the fear of the need to "specialize" in something early, and that by not doing this your child will somehow be just an average kid. How do we learn to rejoice in the average and celebrate as a whole society the exceptional? I'm not sure, but I know that this whole preoccupation is unhealthy, it is dysfunctional and is as bad as alcoholism, tobacco abuse, or any other types of dependency.

    I would love to have a son that is a pro athlete. I'd get season tickets; all the other fathers would point at me and I might get a chance to meet Sandy Koufax. It isn't going to happen, though. But you know what I am certain will happen? I'll raise self-reliant kids, who will hang out with me when I'm older, remember my birthday, care for their mother, take me to lunch and the movies, buy me club level seats at Yankee Stadium on occasion, call me at least four times a week and let me in on all the good things in their life, and turn to me for some comfort and advice for all the bad things. I am convinced that those things just will not happen as much for parents of the "hour-long" generation. You can't create a sense of family only at spring and Christmas break. It just won't happen. Sure, the kids will probably grow up to be adequate adults. They'll reflect on how supportive you were by driving them to all their games and practices and workouts. They'll call the ER from a couple states away to see how mom's doing but in time you'll see that something will be missing, something that was sacrificed for a piano tutor, a pitching coach, a travel soccer tournament. It may take years, but in time, you'll see.

    Dr.Louis M. Profeta is an Emergency Physician Practicing in Indianapolis,Indiana.

    #2
    You bored Marbull

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      You bored Marbull
      This doesn't seem bored...this hits the nail on the head for a lot of he BS we see on this board.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
        This doesn't seem bored...this hits the nail on the head for a lot of he BS we see on this board.
        The interesting thing is that a large percentage of the BS is posted directly by MoreBull.

        Comment


          #5
          Yes he he/she likes to sir the pot but guess it makes he/she feel good

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Marbull View Post
            Ive edited his original article to make it a bit more "family friendly"

            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


            I don't care if your eight year old can throw a baseball through six inches of plywood. He is not going to the pros. I don't care if your twelve-year-old scored seven touchdowns last week in Pop Warner. He is not going to the pros. I don't care if your sixteen -year-old made first team all-state in basketball. He is not playing in the pros. I don't care if your freshman in college is a varsity scratch golfer, averaging two under par. He isn't playing in the pros. Now tell me again how good he is. I'll lay you two to one odds right now - and I don't even know your kid, I have never even see them play - but I'll put up my pension that your kid is not playing in the pros. It is simply an odds thing. There are far too many variables working against your child. Injury, burnout, others who are better - these things are just a fraction of the barriers preventing your child from becoming "the one."

            So how do we balance being the supportive parent who spends three hours a day driving all over heaven's half acre to allow our child to pursue his or her dream without becoming the supportive parent that drives all over hell's half acre to allow our child to pursue OUR dream? When does this pursuit of athletic stardom become something just shy of a gambling habit? From my experience in the ER I've developed some insight in how to identify the latter.

            1. When I inform you as a parent that your child has just ruptured their ACL ligament or Achilles tendon, if the next question out of your mouth is, "How long until he or she will be able to play?" you have a serious problem.

            2. If you child is knocked unconscious during a soccer game and can't remember your name let alone my name but you feel it is a "vital" piece of medical information to let me know that he is a starting defender and that the team will probably lose now because he was taken out of the game, you need to see a counselor.

            3. If I tell you that mononucleosis has caused the spleen to swell and that participation in a contact sport could cause a life threatening rupture and bleeding during the course of the illness and you then ask me, "If we just get some extra padding around the spleen, would it be OK to play?" someone needs to hit you upside the head with a two by four.

            I bet you think I'm kidding about the above patient and parent interactions. I wish I were, but I'm not. These are a fraction of the things I have heard when it comes to children and sports. Every ER doctor in America sees this. How did we get here? How did we go from spending our family times in parks and picnics, at movies and relatives houses to travel baseball and cheerleading competitions? When did we go from being supportive to being subtly abusive?

            Why are we spending our entire weekends schlepping from county to county, town to town, state to state to play in some B.S. regional, junior, West Coast, invitational, elite, prep, all- state, conference, blah, blah, blah tourney? We decorate our cars with washable paint, streamers, numbers and names. We roll in little carpool caravans trekking down the interstate honking and waiving at each other like Rev. Jim Jones followers in a Kool-Aide line. Greyhounds, Hawks, Panthers, Eagles, Bobcats, Screaming Devils, Scorching Gonads or whatever other mascot adorns their jerseys.

            Somewhere along the line we got distracted, and the practice field became the dinner table of the new millennium. Instead of huddling around a platter of baked chicken, mashed potatoes and fruit salad, we spend our evenings handing off our children like 4 x 200 batons. From baseball practice to cheerleading, from swimming lessons to personal training, we have become the "hour-long" generation of five to six, six to seven, and seven to eight, selling the souls of our family for lacrosse try-outs. But why do we do this?

            It's because, just like everyone else, we're afraid. We are afraid that Emma will make the cheerleading squad instead of Suzy and that Mitch will start at first base instead of my Dillon. But it doesn't stop there. You see, if Mitch starts instead of Dillon then Dillon will feel like a failure, and if Dillon feels like a failure then he will sulk and cower in his room, and he will lose his friends because all his friends are on the baseball team, too, and if he loses his friends then he will start dressing in Goth duds, pierce his testicles, start using drugs and begin listening to headbanging music with his door locked. Then, of course, it's just a matter of time until he's surfing the net for neo-Nazi memorabilia, visiting gun shows and then opening fire in the school cafeteria. That is why so many fathers who bring their injured sons to the ER are so afraid that they won't be able to practice this week, or that he may miss the game this weekend. Miss a game, you become a mass murderer - it's that simple.

            Suzy is a whole other story, though. You see, if she doesn't make the cheerleading squad she will lose a whole bunch of friends and not be as popular as she should (and she's REAL popular). If she loses some friends, she will be devastated - all the cool kids will talk about her behind her back, so then she'll sit in her room all day, eating Ding Dongs and cutting at her wrists. Then, of course, it is only a matter of time until she is chatting on the Internet with fifty-year-old men and meeting up with them at truck stops. And that is why every mother is so frightened when her daughters have mononucleosis or influenza. Miss cheerleading practice for a week, and your daughter is headed for a career in porn. It's that simple.

            We have become a frightened society that can literally jump from point A to point Z and ignore everything in between. We spend so much time worrying about who might get ahead - and if we're falling behind - that we have simply lost our common sense. Myself included.

            There was a time when sick or injured children were simply sick or injured children. They needed bed rest, fluid, antibiotics and a limitation on activity. They just needed to get better. They didn't NEED to get better.

            I know, I know. Your family is different. You do all these things because your kid loves to compete, he loves the travel basketball, she loves the swim team, it's her life, it's what defines him. Part of that is certainly true but a big part of that isn't. Tens of thousands of families thrive in this setting, but I'm telling you, from what I've seen as a clinician, tens of thousands don't. It is a hidden scourge in society today, taxing and stressing husbands, wives, parents and children. We're denying children the opportunity to explore literally thousands of facets of interests because of the fear of the need to "specialize" in something early, and that by not doing this your child will somehow be just an average kid. How do we learn to rejoice in the average and celebrate as a whole society the exceptional? I'm not sure, but I know that this whole preoccupation is unhealthy, it is dysfunctional and is as bad as alcoholism, tobacco abuse, or any other types of dependency.

            I would love to have a son that is a pro athlete. I'd get season tickets; all the other fathers would point at me and I might get a chance to meet Sandy Koufax. It isn't going to happen, though. But you know what I am certain will happen? I'll raise self-reliant kids, who will hang out with me when I'm older, remember my birthday, care for their mother, take me to lunch and the movies, buy me club level seats at Yankee Stadium on occasion, call me at least four times a week and let me in on all the good things in their life, and turn to me for some comfort and advice for all the bad things. I am convinced that those things just will not happen as much for parents of the "hour-long" generation. You can't create a sense of family only at spring and Christmas break. It just won't happen. Sure, the kids will probably grow up to be adequate adults. They'll reflect on how supportive you were by driving them to all their games and practices and workouts. They'll call the ER from a couple states away to see how mom's doing but in time you'll see that something will be missing, something that was sacrificed for a piano tutor, a pitching coach, a travel soccer tournament. It may take years, but in time, you'll see.

            Dr.Louis M. Profeta is an Emergency Physician Practicing in Indianapolis,Indiana.
            Marbullcrap. Completely wrong. If you put in 10,000 hours, you can achieve anything you put your mind to. Just ask Micheal Jordan. He didn't even make varsity basketball his Freshman year.

            Comment


              #7
              Musta struck a nerve with some of the ONYX parents with this one.

              Comment


                #8
                I found the article quite amusing. Many of the things mentioned in this script are often manifested right here on the pages of these threads.

                I know that I have been guilty of some of the scenarios mentioned (probably all at one point) in the past few years.

                If some of you I have offended because you've found yourself caught up in the same feelings, I'm sorry that you have allowed yourself to stray down that path. Trust me, it will pass and you'll look back at all of this with a smile someday.

                The rest of you can just press on about your daily pathetic lives living them through your kids thinking their the next Jordan, Woods, Federer, Mickelson, Ronaldo, Manning or Durant.

                I dont care .......

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                  Marbullcrap. Completely wrong. If you put in 10,000 hours, you can achieve anything you put your mind to. Just ask Micheal Jordan. He didn't even make varsity basketball his Freshman year.
                  Hows that going with your lil Jordan ? Are you sure it's not 100,000 hours ? Just because you read it on the internet doesn't make it true for your lil Johnny.

                  I know of a guy that didnt play football ever til his senior year. Went on to play D1 and later for both Dallas and Oakland before retiring. He didnt put in even 5000 hours before going pro.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                    Yes he he/she likes to sir the pot but guess it makes he/she feel good
                    If by me posting, gives you the feeling of your short hairs being burnt, by all means let me find more to share.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Marbull View Post
                      Hows that going with your lil Jordan ? Are you sure it's not 100,000 hours ? Just because you read it on the internet doesn't make it true for your lil Johnny.

                      I know of a guy that didnt play football ever til his senior year. Went on to play D1 and later for both Dallas and Oakland before retiring. He didnt put in even 5000 hours before going pro.
                      We're not leaving anything to chance. My 10 year old has already put in 8,350 hours so she will easily hit 10,000 hours in the next year or so. My 7 year started with a trainer at age four and has hit topped 5,000 hours. Just because your football friend was able to pull some political strings to get into the NFL, doesn't mean mean you need to be stupid. You can keep living in your fantasy world. I'll be laughing all the way to my big fat bank account in a few years.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Totally agree

                        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                        We're not leaving anything to chance. My 10 year old has already put in 8,350 hours so she will easily hit 10,000 hours in the next year or so. My 7 year started with a trainer at age four and has hit topped 5,000 hours. Just because your football friend was able to pull some political strings to get into the NFL, doesn't mean mean you need to be stupid. You can keep living in your fantasy world. I'll be laughing all the way to my big fat bank account in a few years.
                        True that, I'm with you there buddy. My dd is in the kitchen working on foot skills as I wright this.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                          We're not leaving anything to chance. My 10 year old has already put in 8,350 hours so she will easily hit 10,000 hours in the next year or so. My 7 year started with a trainer at age four and has hit topped 5,000 hours. Just because your football friend was able to pull some political strings to get into the NFL, doesn't mean mean you need to be stupid. You can keep living in your fantasy world. I'll be laughing all the way to my big fat bank account in a few years.

                          Did you have children to bring joy and love to your life? Or to pimp out for profit?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I had no idea that sarcasm was so lost on this board.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                              I had no idea that sarcasm was so lost on this board.
                              https://img0.etsystatic.com/016/0/52...74286_nycz.jpg

                              Comment

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