Good morning coach,
I want you to know that we parents appreciate and are rooting for you. Although a lot of bull****, joisting, and craziness is posted here. I believe that even the moderately delusional parents are well intentioned.
I am writing because the little ones are watching you.
You’re an powerful adult to them and the referees as well. Your actions, decisions, and interactions with their teammates snd other teams will have profound implications for their moral and spiritual formation.
You’re like their first boss and they talk about you a lot. They know who you don’t like so much and we hear about it.
We all have our days.
None of us is perfect. But I have a request, when you take a group on please bracket your biases. Treat every young player with kindness and dignity. They notice when you don’t. You have a lot of power.
Try to find positive strategies for giving feedback. Think about these strategies in advance. Maybe even develop drills to help the weaker players with their deficits. Find ways to honor them. Everyone will notice.
Give regular objective evaluations.
In brief, they’re in a long formative moment in their little lives. Soccer is everything for many.
When is not right it can subtly undermine their sense of safety and security. This sense of disequilibrium can undermine their trust in you and their investment in trainings, games, and the overall endeavor.
More importantly, how things go at practice and on the pitch will shape their citizenship, worldview, and optimism. It might sound like an exaggeration but it’s true.
Thanks for taking tge time to consider one parent’s perspective.
I want you to know that we parents appreciate and are rooting for you. Although a lot of bull****, joisting, and craziness is posted here. I believe that even the moderately delusional parents are well intentioned.
I am writing because the little ones are watching you.
You’re an powerful adult to them and the referees as well. Your actions, decisions, and interactions with their teammates snd other teams will have profound implications for their moral and spiritual formation.
You’re like their first boss and they talk about you a lot. They know who you don’t like so much and we hear about it.
We all have our days.
None of us is perfect. But I have a request, when you take a group on please bracket your biases. Treat every young player with kindness and dignity. They notice when you don’t. You have a lot of power.
Try to find positive strategies for giving feedback. Think about these strategies in advance. Maybe even develop drills to help the weaker players with their deficits. Find ways to honor them. Everyone will notice.
Give regular objective evaluations.
In brief, they’re in a long formative moment in their little lives. Soccer is everything for many.
When is not right it can subtly undermine their sense of safety and security. This sense of disequilibrium can undermine their trust in you and their investment in trainings, games, and the overall endeavor.
More importantly, how things go at practice and on the pitch will shape their citizenship, worldview, and optimism. It might sound like an exaggeration but it’s true.
Thanks for taking tge time to consider one parent’s perspective.
Comment