Saturday, August 18

Ah, and this is where we diverge...

So far, there have only been a couple of instances where I've found myself completely unable to connect with the football folks on any level at all. Of course, we haven't even had a game yet, so who knows what that means. Both of these situations have left me pretty jaded toward the football community, and more confident in what we're doing with our overall philosophy toward life.

First case:
This little guy we'll call Dexter. (No, of course it's not his real name - I could use his real name because there are about 6.8 million of them in the South, but that's okay. I like Dexter.) Poor kid cries. A lot. He's not used to this, he's never played sports before at all, and we've had record-breaking heat. He's probably 30 pounds overweight, but I think they weigh on a curve down here, anyway. His parents seem to be accustomed to his crying, and he gets about as much empathy from them as, say... well, none. He's a sweet boy. He cries and cries, but he gets out there and tries. Gotta give the little guy credit.

His Dad was a little encouraging. His Mom turned out to be one of the women I had avoided studiously at the football camp. You know the kind, her kids are harder on her than any other mother's children, her labor was more damaging/difficult/dangerous/etc. than anybody else's ever, her husband is a bigger slacker/less observant/stoopider than any other man on earth. These women, I Avoid. Like. The. Plague.

So, last week, Dexter is practicing, but he's favoring one arm. And he's crying. (He hadn't cried in two days!) His mother starts telling me that he'd hurt it the day before (Monday, I'd missed that practice), but that she'd made him keep practicing, using the argument that he'd "just sprained it real bad". She'd told him not to show the coach. And Tuesday morning, she had made him write his name, and he could do it, although he cried the entire time and "he couldn't eat", but she sent him to school anyway. I looked over at the boy, and could see from several yards off that his wrist was bigger than my ankles are 8.5 months into pregnancy! And there was a huge bump. My immediate thought was, "That kid has broken his arm!" As I turned to ask his mother just how stupid she really was (not normally something I'd actually do, but I'd reached a saturation point with this woman over the last two weeks), the boy walked up to tell his mother the coach had called him over and told him to go get it x-rayed. Right. Now.

She was a little put off that they had to go to the hospital. I don't know if it even dawned on her that she wasn't treating her child very well. Or that, perhaps, she was wrong. She wasn't in a hurry to pack it up, and made him carry all his gear. We haven't seen him since, and today was weigh-in. Zorak took James, so I don't know if Dexter made it for that, or if he'll be out for the season. It breaks my heart to think this little guy is going to live with the attitude that, somehow, it's his fault. With that woman, it always is the kids' fault or the husband's fault. I'll be sorry to see the little guy go, but not so much about not seeing his mother.

Second Case:
Ball-Carrying Positions. In this league, a player cannot weigh more than 85 pounds to play a ball-carrying position. The point being, if you're *that* much bigger than everybody else on the field and you have the ball most of the time, you'll be the cause of nightmares, broken bones, and possibly some post-season bed-wetting among the slight-of-build crowd. We have a couple who came in over 100#, so they obviously won't be in ball-carrying positions.

But I learned yesterday that one little boy lived at the coach's house this past week. The first week of school. He's 8. And he lived at the coach's house for "intensive dieting and physical therapy," so that he could "make weight". In seven days, this boy went from 91 pounds to 85 pounds. Now, lest you think I just "don't get it", I do. I remember the guys in high school walking around in sweat suits for a week before a weigh-in. I remember the guys taking protein shakes and power bars for wrestling weigh-ins. This isn't a completely foreign concept to me (although I do find it ironic that it's perfectly acceptable for a young man to do this to himself, when we acknowledge how damaging and dangerous this practice can be for young ladies -- but that's another topic for another day). I remember one guy getting sick and winding up in the hospital from taking diuretics, too.

But these kids, the ones I'm talking about today, are 7 and 8 years old! And it's not as if the coach and this kid's parents did this for his overall health and well-being, to help him develop a healthier lifestyle. No, he has two all-you-can-eat meals awaiting him "anywhere you want, after you make weight". Because who cares what he weighs once they've got him approved for a ball-carrying position?

There's more to life than football. And it's obvious that some people do not get it. I know some of you out there will disagree with me, and that's fine. I'm not going to back down from my position that children are not pawns. Children are not tools to be used. If this is all about the game, then why are we putting kids through this? Last I checked, a "game" doesn't involve this kind of manipulation in order to "win". And really, who's winning in these two cases? Nobody. Certainly not the children, that's for sure.

This time, I'll be the one to say it: we definitely aren't from around here.

Kiss those babies, and go easy on them. You only get one shot at this.
~Dy

14 comments:

Jules said...

Oh Dy! This makes me want to cry!! I have seen my share of moms like you describe- her kids are awful, her husband is awful, her life is awful. I avoid them too because I just can't stand it.

But the children are what makes me so sad. They bear the brunt of these poor parenting skills and grow up to do the same with their own kids because they don't know that things can be different. I am not sure how to help but my heart really hurts for kids with parents like that. I want to take them all home with me!

As for the weight thing I have not seen any extreme sports parents here...yet. The extent of our sports has been soccer and baseball. This year we will also have girls' basketball and hockey. I would imagine that with hockey being the "big" sport around here, we will eventually run into some coaches or parents who are questionable. I hope that if I do, I have the courage to say something and the wisdom to know what to say!

Emily (Laundry and Lullabies) said...

Oh Dy, those poor children! It is hard to believe that stories like that can actually be true, they're so awful. I don't understand parents like the - so self-centered that they can't even see what is right in front of them. Sad, sad, sad. I hope the kids grow up without getting too screwed up in the process. :(

Dy said...

Yeah. I'm not a favorite with the parents, already. That's okay. I can't join in on the "my kids/family/life suck" bandwagon, and I won't. And I have to make a point of pointing out when their kids do neat things. The kids are great, and I try to be encouraging to them.

You know, this bit w/ the dieting and such really caught me off guard. On so many other things, the coach is really down-to-earth. He saw Dexter's arm and immediately called him over so he could look at it. And it wasn't a question of going for an x-ray or not. He sent him TO GET ONE. Same thing when James took a hard hit - had him take off his helmet, saw that his neck was hurting, and had him sit out for a bit. Kept checking on him. Usually, there's no question when it comes to safety. I don't know why this whole ball-carrying thing became such a big deal with this one poor kid. Six pounds is a lot to lose in one week, and when you're not quite four feet tall, yet, wowsa!

I hope you don't run into these attitudes. I hope and pray you have wonderful coaches and wonderful families. But I know if you find somebody off kilter, you'll find a gentle, encouraging way to help steer him (or her) back to a better perspective.

Dy

Melora said...

Wow! How horrible! That woman doesn't deserve pets, much less kids. The business about putting a little kid on a crash diet so he can carry a football is just pathetic. I guess it shows how completely mixed up the completely mixed up your community's priorities are. Very sad.

That super competitive, winning over everything attitude is why we won't be signing T. up for Little League, which held in the same warped high esteem in our area.

Jennie C. said...

Oh, Dy. I'm so sorry to hear these stories, but so not surprised. My neighbor, who just moved away, frequently and publicly yelled at her daughter about her weight, just before pulling out of the driveway to go pick up McDonald's for dinner. Poor kids. I'm on mine for the opposite reason: "No, you HAVE to have another piece of cheesecake; you're too skinny!" And she is. Her upward growth has outpaced her outward growth. :-)

Barbara said...

How very sad. Your story makes me glad my kids have never been big on organized sports. Not that it's not happening anyway, but we're not exposed. Being exposed to parents who care more about performance than the lifelong affects to their children makes me so very sad.

Bob and Claire said...

Wow, Dy. Just wow. We haven't done organized sports yet, except for Upwards (no dieting there, LOL) and track, which was coached by the absolute nicest, most encouraging man on the planet. I'm thinking I like it here in my bubble. That is just so sad.

Claudia said...

I am so sorry about poor little Dexter. Can you imagine if I had accepted the verdict on Sam that it was just a pulled muscle and made him sit it out? I don't get people. I think Sam's broken arm has been a blessing in disguise to keep him out of this sport while we live in the South.

Ritsumei said...

It's not just the south - we're in Wisconsin & I swear the local gods are Beer & "da Pack." My Monkey is too young to do sports yet, but I just know these sorts of attitudes will be around here too.

Staci Eastin said...

*sigh*

This is precisely why we have flat out *forbid* our son from playing football. We got a taste of this kind of attitude when we let him wrestle in Kindergarten (yes, Kindergarten. You read that right). This is a football town, so I can't imagine it would be any better.

H said...

Oh. Oh. Oh. That poor little Dexter! (Is his name really Bubba?) Poor guy! I have no words.

melissa said...

Oh. My. Gosh!! Are you kidding me???? Our program is NOTHING like that.(Well, except for the moron- parent thing, which I think is universal when you jump into the public arena.) That is outrageous and idiotic. I am curious, is this Pop Warner football?

Get a chair, and then move it AWAY from the parents. ;-)

Bridget said...

We are incredibly lucky in our league. On weigh day if there is a child that is questable about his weight, they ask the parents to feed his lightly, that day, no sodas, sports drinks, only water and then after they weigh they send them home to eat whatever they want. They don't have to practice. There are no crash diets or starvation going on, and that is not just for our age group that is all 3 age groups. Most of our coaches are very caring, loving men who love the sport and these kids. My husband is one of them. Safety is the priority and having fun is tied with that. Do they want to win? Of course they do, but they want to teach the kids the fundamentals of football. First and foremost is always having fun and learning a team sport. I know Rusty is my husband but I hear kids, and parents, all the time talking about him and how much they like him. When they split our junior league, 9-11 ages, there were parents who went to our board president reqesting their child be moved from the team they were assigned to over to Rusty's team.
I am sorry you all have gotten with a league that is concerned about having children diet, please don't let it leave a bad taste in your mouth, this can be such a rewarding sport for a child. If. it's. for. that. child. Parents forget that they child has to like it and enjoy it. Good luck with that Mom, we have some of those also. I try to stay away from them.
Sorry this was so long.

Anonymous said...

I hate those complaining women, especially the "all men stink" women. It seems these days if you don't join in the henfest, you end up being ostracizes.

Jeremy is a wrestler and in the past 2 years, he has gained 50 lbs. due to normal growth. I'm already getting worried about him having to wrestle kids 4 years older. Eek!

Congrats on the news!
-Gretchen