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Raising Happy and Successful Adults thru Sports

Raising Happy and Successful Adults thru Sports
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Kurt

Top three Qualities of The Model Parent

July 20, 2019 by Kurt Leave a Comment

There are a few simple things you can do to appear as the “model parent”. Just to be clear this does NOT mean you are perfect and always follow these suggestions. However, it DOES mean you strive for these attributes and regretfully apologize when you don’t meet these goals.

Self Control

The model parent has tremendous self-control. You have mastery of your emotional response and maintain a smile and appreciation for the experiences. The risk is you appear cold, disconnected and even non-competitive at times.

The reality is you keep an eye on the very long range. If (actually when) you have an incident where an official makes a bad decision which “costs the game” keep things in perspective. The loss of a game, even a championship game, is an insignificant pain compared to mistakes and pain caused by poor life decisions like driving drunk or intoxicated.

Experiences

You are the model parent when you make sure sports are the best experiences possible. You make sure kids appreciate the facilities they have, equipment they bring and family to cheer them on. The consistent ability to work with others, as a team, reinforces collaboration and communication skills to form healthy relationships.

Sports experiences provide lessons that teach kids how to be effective adults. The more experiences in a low risk, high stress environment, the more they learn how to adapt to those same settings as adults.

Model for Others

Keep an eye out for other parents that need a little encouragement. They need a little mentoring along with a clear demonstration of the expectations in their own life.
Help them keep the competition in perspective by redirecting them to focus on relationships and improvement.

Another way to consider the impact is a perspective repeated by one of my favorite podcast hosts, John O’Sullivan and his Changing the Game Project. He ends his podcast with, “Remember, your influence is never neutral”. Obviously, parents have an influence on their own kids but they also have an influence on other kids and adults. I hope we get you focused on being a positive influence all the time.

Filed Under: Impact

Be Part of the Solution

August 30, 2018 by Kurt Leave a Comment

We all see issues with volunteer youth coaches who want to make a difference but become frustrated. Their visions of success paired with a passion for teaching the game erodes when it doesn’t work out just as they expected. The frustration leads to shouting at officials, expressions of disgust and coaching stops. They no longer are the role model you want for your kids. Kids who need to learn how to work with others and grow.

Be Part of the Solution

We need to be focused on making sports a positive experience for all kids. Together we can turn frustration and failure into learning opportunities. Please help be part of the solution.

Play My Kid Framework

The Play My Kid Framework is a mechanism to help you break down situations you see that make you feel uneasy or know can be handled more effectively. The purpose of the framework is to give you the tools to identify the issue, recognize the change and communicate the solution. The framework will help you, as parents:

  • Why are these situations so uncomfortable?
  • Is there a better way to handle these situations?
  • What can parents do to improve youth sports?

Please share this page with a friend, coach or program director. Let them know you want them to be part of the solution.

Please Sign-up Below

Please make sure you are on our mailing list by sharing your email below and sharing this page. Play My Kid has some wonderful content to help you make youth sports the foundation for building happy and successful adults. We need your participation to make it a movement that changes youth sports for generations to come.

Filed Under: Blog

Make Your Kids’ Dreams Success

August 18, 2018 by Kurt Leave a Comment

Dreams of Success

We all see the success stories on TV and read about the huge contracts for professional athletes. Then we hear about the “hard work” and “dedication” they put into their craft without credit to the God given gifts they were bestowed. The message is clear. If YOU put in the hard work, or someone pushes you hard enough, you too can reach these levels of ‘success’.

While most of us realize those are the exceptional stories. Not everyone actually reaches those levels. However, it doesn’t keep us from dreaming about that as our ‘success’. Although dreams are important and necessary, they can also turn out to be more humble as we grow older and gain knowledge from life experiences. This was brought to my attention recently when I discovered this Chinese proverb, “Knowledge makes humble, ignorance makes proud”. This aligns perfectly with my Catholic faith. It allows me to accept everyone’s dream today with the knowledge that it will morph without becoming any less important.

Knowledge makes humble, ignorance makes proud

Chinese Proverb
Supporting Dreams of Success

Purpose

I had superstar dreams once upon a time. Dreams of playing  basketball on television. I thought performing in front of a national audience while playing a game would show everyone else “I made it”. For many reasons, (we won’t get into now), that dream morphed into a more humble version. I’ve upgraded my dreams to help others.

My dream today is to help kids keep those dreams alive. I want to help morph those dreams into a powerful and humble life filled with happiness and success. Moreover, I want to help today’s parents see a better, more humble vision for youth sports. A vision full of ‘experiences for everyone’ to help kids win the ‘championship of life’. The championship which has the lifelong daily rewards of happiness and success.

Today’s Dream

My vision for youth sports is to get participation rates in youth sports up to 100% by teaching parents how to use sports to raise happy and successful adults. That may sound like an unrealistic goal, but I can’t think of any kid who would not benefit from the life lessons learned in youth sports. Plus, with the right perspective, even the worse experiences teach life lessons in relationships and mindset.

The key is getting parents to drive change in youth sports culture. We need to shift the focus of youth sports. Parents need to keep kids, and coaches, focused on the skills developed along the journey rather than focusing on the outcomes. Parents hold the keys.

Parents Have Control

There are tons of awesome resources for coaches to change the focus of youth sports. We have resources like Changing the Game Project, Winning Youth Coaching, the Positive Coaching Alliance and others listed on our resources page. Coaches have boundaries when influencing parents to change their thinking about the value in youth sports.

Ultimately, parents have the control. They impact the focus, direction and environment of youth sports by deciding where to place their kids and value those experiences. They need to evaluate the best solution for THEIR kids.

More and more, parents have to chose between two polar opposite ends of the spectrum. On one end of the spectrum, they can participate in recreational sports that have novice coaches and inexperienced players. At the other end of the spectrum, they are asked to commit to super competitive, and expensive, programs that require an unrealistic dedication to one sport at the expense of any other sports or activity.

Making a Changes for Success

Together, we can make a change. We can change the expectations of parents everywhere to make youth sports a positive force for ALL kids. Help us tweak the “dreams” of today’s kids to make sure the hard work and dedication is recognized as tools all kids need. Tools that will make them happy and successful adults.

If you agree and want to help. Share this post and sign up for our email list to find out more.

Filed Under: Blog

Protecting Our Kids

August 17, 2018 by Kurt Leave a Comment

This past May, 2018, a 19 year old University of Maryland football player died after running sprints during a team workout. He was disoriented and struggled to stand before he collapsed and was transported to the hospital. Reportedly, his body temperature at the hospital was 106 degrees and he was diagnosed with heatstroke.

Although these tragic stories are rare, we have to ask ourselves, “Are we, as parents, doing the right thing when it comes to protecting our kids from sports?” Everyone want to know how this could happen given everything we know about sports performance.

Pushing Kids

We have a strong belief pushing through pain and struggle is just “tough love” or “building character”. There were times, when I caught myself pushing kids beyond their comfort zone.  I felt sympathy for them. In part because they had painful expressions, but also because it wasn’t fun any more. It was just WORK.

This drive is taught to kids across the country and endorsed by today’s high performance athletic programs. I wonder if we are teaching our kids to recognize their limits and understand their

Effect on Kids

In hindsight, I wish there were parents around that told me, “you are not motivating them, you’re scaring them.” Eventually, I realized this on my own but only because I wasn’t the worst offender.

I watched other coaches rant and rave about players. Then I watched in amazement as parents stood behind the coach and echo the messages of disapproval and disappointment. I could see the grade school kids sulk, ashamed of their performance. Who is really helping these kids? What are they learning?

While they are getting scarred emotionally, all they really want is the satisfaction of getting better and support from the adults they know best. When athletic performance is the only way to achieve that satisfaction, they may put themselves a permanent risk physically and emotionally.

Purpose

Today, we need to focus on protecting our kids. We need to teach kids the relative value of sports performance to the value of life. Pushing your self to get better in sports is awesome for everyone to experience. However, sport is only a metaphor for the lessons on how to have a happy and successful life. Play My Kid is here to help today’s parents make youth sports an experience for everyone which helps kids win the championship of life and the prizes of happiness and success.

Filed Under: Blog

Failure is Road to Success

August 3, 2018 by Kurt Leave a Comment

Lesson

Parenting five kids is learning how to parent three plus. You learn how to get them safely independent. A key strategy is teaching them how to play. Good play keeps them occupied, but great play keeps them occupied and trying to get better by learning ‘how to fail’.

Teaching vs Learning

Kids do not learn because we know how to teach. They didn’t learn to walk because we did drills with them. You put them in safe situations and let them fall. If they got frustrated you tried to encourage them, unless they were done for the day.

However, they didn’t just give up and walk away when they saw other kids walking. They watched others and tried to imitate. Eventually, they realized they had to figure out how to move their body to mimic the outcome, standing on two feet. That process included dozens or hundreds of attempts along the way. Correcting and adjusting taught them how to improve.

The process learning how to walk is a simple example of how we learn, grow and advance. They saw a model that works because walking got them where they wanted to go much faster. They tried it on their own, probably with some encouragement and support. Then failed until they saw success.

Life Skills

This process of setting a goal, trying with failure until those tries looked a lot like the goal. The same is true your whole life, but the goals are more complex and each failure can take longer than falling to the ground as a toddler. This is the real value in kids playing sports. They learn to fail until they succeed.

I’ve learned the most successful people are confident because they know each failure is closer to success. Moreover, they are not afraid to continuously enhance the goal to make sure they are always improving.

Filed Under: Blog

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