Los Angeles Times

Sports son’s dad is a bully

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Dear Amy: My husband is usually a dedicated, loving and fun father, but when we go to our son’s Little League games, another side comes out.

My husband is the loud one on the sidelines — pacing, swearing and turning red; he micromanag­es our son and shouts belittling comments at him and other kids on our team.

He argues with the umpires and complains about the coaches.

My husband has coached a few of my son’s teams as well, and he has been ejected from games during those seasons.

I’ve tried asking him to be calmer. I have urged him to try to see things from our son’s perspectiv­e, but his reply is that you should always demand 100% from people.

How can I get him to see that this behavior is unacceptab­le and actually harming our son? Exhausted

Dear Exhausted: If your son screamed, yelled, threw tantrums on the field, and got ejected, would your husband endorse this behavior? I doubt it.

I shared your question with Tina Syer of the Positive Coaching Alliance (pos itivecoach.org), a national nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to training parents and coaches to have positive and pro-social experience­s on the field.

She responds, “Sports parents too often lose sight of the big picture in youth sports, which are ideal for teaching life lessons that can help kids develop and achieve in all aspects of their lives. ‘Exhausted’ should persuade her husband to focus on the long-term effects of his behavior.

“Learning to compete and give 100% is important, and the way to ensure your son takes those life lessons is by providing unconditio­nal love and support, regardless of performanc­e, and by helping him process the youth sports experience.

“Berating him, coaches, officials or others only serves to humiliate the child — chasing him from the sport — and to drive a wedge between him and his father, potentiall­y for the rest of their lives.”

Dear Amy: I am 52, and happily married, but my wife has lost almost all interest in intimacy.

She is 51, healthy, and in great shape but says that she just doesn’t have the drive anymore. This has been building for several years. We have had many conversati­ons and a few therapy sessions, but nothing changes.

I have tried romantic gestures and flirting but get little response. She finally has said that she gives me permission to explore intimacy elsewhere. She has even suggested possibilit­ies within our social circle.

My first choice by far would be to rekindle the connection with her, but that has not worked.

Should I accept the permission slip and see what is out there? Frustrated Spouse

Dear Frustrated: You don’t mention your wife visiting her physician. Low libido can have a physical cause; it would be wise for her to explore medical/hormonal options.

If you and your wife can work out a way for you both to stay married — and actually be married — while you seek physical intimacy elsewhere, then you could try it, but my instinct is that your emotional marital connection would be frayed, possibly to the breaking point.

Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@amydickins­on.com.

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