But one of the most painful things in life is seeing your child hurting.
We all know by now that I'm not the warm and fuzzy-type mommy. I'm not above making my child cry when he has it coming. However, when someone or something else makes my child cry, it hurts me, too.
Ian is playing baseball this season. Against his will. Rob signed him up based on Ian having
This year, Ian isn't
Having never stuck with anything I wasn't good at until I hit my thirties, I am sympathetic to Ian and his overwhelming desire to quit baseball. It pains me to see him in tears in the dugout, knowing that the embarrassment of the tears themselves is probably as bad or worse than the play he just failed to make and the feeling that he's let his team down again. If this was an individual sport like karate, golf, or tennis, it would be easier to force him to stick with it for a determined amount of time, but being a team sport makes it that much more difficult for me to not kidnap him from the dugout and tuck him away safely somewhere.
I don't think Rob will allow Ian to quit baseball until this season is over, and it's not because he's cruel. I'm sure he believes that this experience will build Ian's character and hopefully teach him something about teamwork and perseverance. I hope he's right. In the meantime, I'll try to keep my sympathetic tears for Ian to myself.
2 comments:
Parenting is truly torturous when we feel obliged to compel our children to do something that we would never choose for ourselves! How often do I feel the Quintessential Hypocrite for forcing my sons to outdoor activity--in part because I want the screen time (or the quiet time!) for myself??? Or when I insist on them trying something that I would have fought my parents tooth and nail before tasting? Or when I discipline them for using words that have escaped my own mouth?
I guess it's the challenge of wanting more/better/other for our kids than we have had for ourselves. Take comfort, at least, in knowing that whatever the experience is teaching our kids, it is certainly teaching us a new depth of empathy, compassion, and introspection!
sounds like he could use some one-on-one coaching. He'd like it if it was fun.
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