from John
Leonard, American Swimming Coaches Association
After thirty-three full years
of observation, it has occurred to me that some parents must internally delight
in the idea of sabotaging their child's swim career. They must for some
perverse reason WANT to do this, since they work so incredibly hard at it and
are so remarkably successful. Hereafter, my top ten list of means and methods.
(And more seriously, some clear examples on positive alternatives.)
If you can't see what's wrong with this, you're the problem. The approach that works best? Let the rewards become
internal. Let the sport "belong" to the child, not something that
"Mommy wants me to do." Get them to understand the value of working
hard to improve themselves EVERY DAY, and allow them opportunities to
"prove themselves" through THEIR sport.
Reality? Children develop at
different rates, in terms of size, strength, coordination, emotional and
intellectual maturity and just about everything else. Allow your child to
compete ONLY against itself, and measure them against only their own best
efforts.
You're just encouraging them to swim Faster, right??? Right? Right? Huh? What should you
do? Just about ANYTHING except coach. Parents are for unconditional love and
support. Coaches are for critical analysis of performance and developing skills
physical, emotional and tactical. STAY AWAY from any coaching. If you doubt
your coaches' ability to coach, talk to them about it, at last resort, go
somewhere you have enough faith in the coaching to stay out of it. No mistake
is worse than trying to be both parent and coach to your child. It's guaranteed
long-term relationship disaster.
Reality? Techniques and thinking
on how to swim races change all the time. Swimming for a ten year old is not
what it might be for a 20 year old, or an Olympic Swimmer. Allow your coach to
select the race strategy that they deem age appropriate and developmentally
proper for your child. If you doubt the coaches
ability to do this, talk to them about it, until you are reassured.
Well, for those who don't know, Sugar is the
Great Satan of physical performance. It creates an immediate "sugar
high" in the bloodstream and then immediately thereafter, a HUGE dip in
the blood sugar, so just about the time your child gets up to swim, they'll
feel like they are wilting and just want to go lie down and rest. Not exactly
"race ready". And don't try to figure out how to "time it"
for the sugar high, either … it won't work, its not
that predictable in timing…. except exertion will immediately trigger the sugar low. What instead?
If they must eat between races and meals, have a bagel or non-sugar
carbohydrate snack.
Wow. Nothing heavier than a great potential,
according to Charlie Brown. If you have an early developing child, stay
away from past results comparisons. Just look at your own child's best times,
and encourage improvement. And if the times aren't improving as they get older,
and thankfully, they still enjoy swimming, just keep your mouth shut and be
pleased that they enjoy the exercise and training. Great
friends to be around, great role models. If you have trouble keeping
your mouth shut, go look around at the mall to see whom your child COULD be
hanging out with. It should inspire you to keep bringing them to the pool.
Reality? Sit down. Smile. Cheer
internally. When your child comes back, ask the child what they thought of
their swim. Listen. Be quiet. Learn. Then cheer wildly for your child's best
friend. That'll make your child happy, not embarrassed. (And hope your child's
friend's parent is cheering for YOUR child!)
What to do after you watch practice? Go Home. Feed your child. DO
NOT TALK ABOUT PRACTICE UNLESS YOUR CHILD WANTS TO DO SO. This is all about
letting the sport belong to the child and not to you. Critical.
Reality? We all get excited when
our child performs well in any way. Try your best to be restrained around your
child. Making a big deal of a best time makes it seem like you are SURPRISED
that they could do so. Like you lack confidence that they
could actually do anything worthwhile. Instead, play it cool. Express
your confidence that the wonderful thing you just saw is an everyday event for
a child as dedicated, hardworking and talented as yours. In
the words of the football coach trying to diminish the "celebration
factor" - "ACT LIKE YOU HAVE BEEN IN THE END ZONE BEFORE."
(And expect to be again.)
What's the right language? Each swim is an opportunity to go fast.
Just another opportunity. If you miss on this one,
you'll get another chance shortly. The more important we make something, the
more the pressure load to perform under. Everything is "just another swim
meet". Everything. Even the Olympic
Games. Our Olympic Coaches tell our Olympic Athletes regularly
…"what do you do in a regular meet? You try to go a best time.
This is the same. Go a best time here, and you'll be fine."
No one swim meet is "make it or break it" for an athletes career.
Don't artificially try to make it