Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
November 26, 2007
>In the latest Nashville Scene edition of Suburban Turmoil, I give thee the final word on George, and preschool soccer. Warning: It’s not pretty. Here’s the full text of the column…
How Soccer Parents Get Their Kicks
“I’m sick of watching this!” a man is yelling from the sidelines at my husband, who’s coaching a game out on the field. “Win at any cost, eh? That girl shouldn’t be playing!”
I look over at the heckler in disbelief as he continues his rant, waving a go-cup of coffee for emphasis. All around him, parents are staring. “Shut up!” one father yells. The girl the heckler’s referring to is all of five years old, playing soccer for the second time in her life. She looks at the man uncertainly and then over at her mom, frowning. I can feel my head beginning to explode.
Welcome to the world of preschool soccer.
When we signed up my three-year-old daughter for the under-six soccer league, I imagined I was giving her a chance to get some exercise and learn about teamwork while I got in some gossip time with my friends on the sidelines. I was wrong.
“Get your head in the game!” a father shouts at his little girl during one match-up as she wanders aimlessly around the field. “Focus on the ball!” a mother screams repeatedly at another game, in what seems like a total waste of a strain on her vocal chords. I mean, how many three-year-olds even understand what ‘focus’ means?
“We are here to play!” I overhear a mom hiss more than once through gritted teeth, jerking up a preschooler who (yet again) has collapsed in tears on the sidelines behind me. Several times, I’ve tried smiling at parents on the other team, only to be met with scowls in return. Fraternizing with the enemy, even in a league where the only criterion to play is that your kid has to be out of diapers, is apparently not allowed.
We receive an e-mail forwarded to us from a friend. Sent by The Heckler to the league officials and all of the other parents on his team, he accuses my husband of recruiting our assigned five-year-old team member as a “ringer.” He has included my husband’s Internet work bio, which mentions that Hubs has coached girls’ soccer for 7 seasons. From that, The Heckler has concluded that Hubs “has obviously been around the block a few times” and “knows every trick in the book.” We laugh, imagining Hubs casing preschool playgrounds for a mini-Mia, but honestly, the e-mail is unsettling. When I guest coach a game a few weeks later, our five-year-old player eyes the sidelines warily. “I’m glad that man isn’t here to make me feel bad again,” she confides to me. I feel the tiniest crack begin to inch its way across my heart.
What is it about soccer for the small set that makes parents lose their minds? For answers, I check in with Dr. Gregg Steinberg, an Austin Peay Sport Psychology professor who recently wrote a book called Flying Lessons (www.myflyinglessons.com), about teaching children to respond like champions in every aspect of their lives. What he has to say about my experiences on the preschool soccer field makes sense. “Parents live vicariously through their children, regardless of age,” he explains. “Their children are a reflection of themselves, and parents are protecting their ego. That makes everyone act crazy.”
I think about the mom I saw at the last game. A former soccer player herself, she clearly had been working with her three-year-old, who scored one goal after another. I looked over at her as she watched her daughter, expecting to see her face aglow with pride. Instead, her brow was knitted, her mouth turned into a frown as she whispered fiercely to herself, completely oblivious to anyone or anything except for her child out on the field.
It’s not like I’m some kind of soccer mom saint, either. I spent the first few games humiliated after my own daughter refused to go out on the field for more than five minutes, opting instead to play ring-around-the-rosie on the sidelines or sit in my lap. I tried bribes and threats and even made excuses for my daughter to the other parents. It became clear to me after a couple of games that I needed a figurative slap across the face. All I was doing was giving my daughter a chance to experience soccer for herself. What she decided to do with that opportunity had to be entirely up to her. We both enjoyed ourselves a whole lot more after my little epiphany. By the end of the season, without my “help,” she was playing most of every game, occasionally even taking a break from socializing on the field to actually kick the ball. Victory!
Some of my friends have had little sympathy for my predicament, saying three-year-olds are too young to be playing competitive soccer, anyway. Dr. Steinberg agrees. “Children need to focus on mastery until they understand morals, ethics, how to handle winning and losing,” he says. “This usually occurs around age ten to twelve.” Ten to twelve? In recreational soccer, that’s the time when kids start leaving the sport, in droves.
I think I just figured out why.
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>Wouldn’t let me login to comment on Black Friday, so I am posting comment here. Ahem.I’d bet that lady without a job plans to resell the stuff she got for a really great deal. It seems to be the thing to do as of late.
>Holidays are fun, eh?Wheeeeeee!
>I forwarded your Scene article link to my husband, who coached his 3rd season of boys soccer (8 yr olds) and has officially retired. All I can say is, I have the opposite kind of post in mind…what do you do when the kids and parents don’t care at all? No one shows up. Kids would rather throw the soccer balls at the coaches head than listen to him, or when they do listen, they do exactly the opposite of what he’s told them on purpose. Or they physically assault their own teammates…But, yeah, I have been on the other side of it too (as a player and family member watching)and parents really get nuts. I think maybe parents should be banned from the games entirely and we’d actually have something the kids can enjoy. HA!
>All good stuff, Lucinda.
>1. I think that 3 is way to young. I watched my little one play and was frustrated because she had the attention span of a 4 year old. She was pretty good. I think 7 or so is a good starting age.2. We had a coach in our league back in the day when I was 10 who was a British George Patton. His players would regularly talk smack to me on the school bus. “We’re better than you guys because we’re 3-0 and you are only 2-0.” When I explained to them that’s because we only played 2 games, they looked at us with blank stares. When we locked horns the following week, we won – 12 to 0. Their best player wasn’t there. The rematch 9 to 0.
>Girlie, I too experienced my first Black Friday and let me tell ya the craziness at the Stanford, KY Walmart at 4:45am was unparalleled. I swear I know why I sleep in every year ‘the day after’….I did get a brand new Lexmark Printer all in one do-hickey for 25 bucks…did YOU get any deals?
>Just read your Thanksgiving post over at parents.com. Would it be possible to ship your mother and grandmother to my place? I can no longer afford Merry Maids.