7 Good Reasons to Get Your Child Involved with Sports


Encourage a Healthy Lifestyle

Making exercise a part of your child’s life teaches your child
the importance of fitness. This, along with proper nutrition,
plays a vital role in maintaining Health. Children need physical
activity every day and participation in sports helps fill this
need. With today’s wealth of video games and increasing computer
literacy, daily physical activity is often times forgotten.
Getting your child involved with sports helps them make exercise
a part of their lifestyle and increases their chance of a being
a healthier adult.

Promote Self Esteem

When a child realizes that they are getting better and better at
their sport, they can’t help but feel a sense of accomplishment.
Choosing a sport your child can grow and improve in gives your
child an opportunity to build self-esteem. Together, with
positive reinforcement from you their parent, they will gain
confidence and have a more positive view of themselves.

Learn Goal Setting

I’m sure you’ll agree goal setting and success go hand in hand.
Participation in sports gives your child a fun, practical way to
learn about goal setting. They’ll see, experience, and learn
about how goal setting works. If your child’s coach doesn’t
cover goal setting, that’s okay! You as a parent can sit down
with your child and set goals. By assisting your child in
developing this skill, you give them a better chance at
succeeding in life.

Learn and Experience Teamwork

How often have you read a help wanted ad where the employer
wants a “team player” or a candidate that “works well with
others”? I see it all the time. How much more valuable are you
as an employee when you can put differences aside and get the
job done? Sports teach children about teamwork and about how
their actions affect other people. If they can’t learn to work
together with teammates while playing a sport they enjoy, how
will they be able to work with co-workers they may or may not
like while performing a job they may or may not enjoy? This is
an important lesson to learn. Encourage your child to be a team
player and, as a sports parent, keep tabs on whether or not your
words and actions promote this trait in your child.

Develop Time Management Skills

Adding extracurricular activities to your child’s schedule
encourages development of and time management and prioritization
skills. Teach your child that taking care of responsibilities,
such as school work and cleaning up after themselves, comes
first. This gives them their first taste of prioritization.
Next, help your child formulate a plan which enables them to
efficiently handle their responsibilities while still leaving
time for sports practices and competitions. For example, show
your child how working on homework instead of playing outside
during their after-school program helps them finish their
homework in time for practice each day. Then go ahead and make
that part of your plan.

Learn About Dealing with Adversity

Everyone makes mistakes. Everyone has problems. How well you
handle these mistakes and problems directly affects happiness
and quality of life. Many people “get in a slump” and can’t get
out of it. Others continue making the same mistakes over and
over again. In sports, we always try to minimize errors, but
we’re human. Mistakes happen. Even professional athletes make
bad choices and make bad plays, but it’s not the mistake that
counts. What you do from that point forward carries much more
significance. If your child learns how to deal with adversity,
errors, and challenges in sports, chances are, they’ll be able
to translate that skill to real life and effectively minimize
mistakes and/or bad decisions as well as competently recover
from set backs.

Have Fun!

Positive experiences play an essential role in raising a happy,
healthy human being. Sports provide numerous opportunities for
positive experiences both for your child as an individual, and
for your family as a whole. “Sports parents” are blessed with
the chance to watch their child have fun while learning and
developing as an athlete and as a human being.

Stacie Mahoe
http://www.articlesbase.com/sports-and-fitness-articles/7-good-reasons-to-get-your-child-involved-with-sports-2649.html

  1. #1 by Pussy cat on July 19, 2010 - 2:58 am

    What was your reason for getting pregnant /wanting children ?
    Im just courious to know what made you have children-
    I would like to have children , because I was raised by my aunt and uncle and I never knew what it was like to call anyone mom or dad, because i didnt have that type of bond with my aunt and uncle. And I never knew what it was like to be able to ask for things so freely , like I see some kids ask their parents for stuff – I like children , im not all gagaa over them when i see them – I wondered if my reason was a good reason to become a parent and treat them , like I would have loved to have been treating growing up , encourage them to be involved in sports and atten all their school functions .. something I never experience grwoing up ..
    thanks for your input -

  2. #2 by lindzymill on July 19, 2010 - 8:00 am

    Im 25, and wanted em for a while. And thot this was a good age to start. Im really excited and cant wait to see my little girl.
    References :
    29 weeks

  3. #3 by Christina J on July 19, 2010 - 8:02 am

    I wanted kids because I wanted to be a mother. I wanted to create something beautiful, watch it grow, teach it things, and be the support for someone like that. I wanted to know the joy of motherhood… to know that unconditional love that nothing in the world can come close to. I want to show my son that there IS good in the world, and that happiness IS in your hands, as long as you mold it into what you want. I think your reasons are good. And with that mindset, I think you’ll make a good mom. Just don’t spoil them!
    References :

  4. #4 by Zuka on July 19, 2010 - 8:04 am

    I don’t think I thought about much more than a burning desire to be a mom. I planned and wanted both of my children.

    Maternal instincts take over from there and contain all of the things you mentioned above plus so much more.

    That being said, not all women have deep maternal instincts. My mother for instance, didn’t really like children and didn’t want to be held accountable for the basics in child rearing. I didn’t let that influence my decision either way. I just went with instinct without too much intellectualizing and let nature take its course.
    References :

  5. #5 by *luvable* on July 19, 2010 - 8:06 am

    I was being irresponsible,having unprotected sex with my bf & not using birth control & got pregnant within a month. It wasn’t planned, but me & my bf wouldn’t change it for the world & we’re so ready to meet our little girl in March.
    References :
    24 weeks

  6. #6 by lilhotgirl29031 on July 19, 2010 - 8:08 am

    i was raised by my grandparents and my aunt to. it is very different from being with mom and dad, that other relatives. i never went to games, parties or anything. they kept me trapped in. i always said that when i have kids i will give them what i never had. parents. the love is different, especially when you see kids out with there parents, you feel a little jealous wathcing someone get called mom and dad, but you have to appreciate the one that raised you.but you have something that is yours, and no one can take away.think of someone calling you mom, something that you never had. its a wonderful feeling. i can relate to you because i couldnt reall consider them as my mom or dad. and my people would always let me know when i asked for something that they didnt want to get, that they were not my parents. and that hurts in the inside.
    References :

  7. #7 by sinnyloo on July 19, 2010 - 8:10 am

    It seems like such an easy question to answer until you really think about it.
    I always wanted children. Love the little creatures.
    Why? I don’t know. I never really thought about it.
    I think it is easier for those who know they DONT want children. The reasons are so much more concrete.
    I guess I always wanted a little part of myself. I wanted someone to carry on the family name. I always thought about the daycare times, holidays, school functions, all those fun things but I think they were more of a bonus to having children than a reason. I think. I don’t really know.
    Listen to what your heart AND your brain tell you.
    Do you have the patience for little feet that grow big and clumpsy? Do you have patience for that sweet little mouth that will at some point learn to insult your very being? Better yet do you have patience, love and the ability to cry and hurt for another human being? How about your temper? Are you violent? Would you beat a child for smearing feces on the wall?
    As long as you haven’t come up with reasons why you don’t want children, then it sounds like you do.
    References :

  8. #8 by southernprincessreese on July 19, 2010 - 8:12 am

    My daughter chose me to be her mom or so i tell her lol. my hubby and i were young (19)when she was born.After her motherhood was all i could ever see myself doing. I loved every min of being mom ( even the bad days)and for my husband who was in foster homes most of his life having children gave him that sense of family he never had hisself as a child. He relives his childhood (everything he missed out on and did get to do )with his children. He theory was he would be exactly the kind of father he had wished for. Me I was lucky and had a wonderful example of motherhood to follow. we now are on baby #4 and couldnt be happier. Of course there ages are spaced out as we had them when we felt finacially stable and ready to welcome more after her. ( Ages 11, 5, 20 months and due in april) Having children can be the greatest blessing in life if you are ready for them. ( both menatlly and finacially) as they are a labor of love and quite expensive. But when you are ready and can provide them the home , love and stability they need and deserve don’t hesitate, they are truly what makes life complete
    References :

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