The Ukiah Daily Journal

Youth sports commitment­s spark responses

- —Wisermom

DEAR READERS >> A recent question from a dad (“J”) who felt pressured by his mother to attend family events over his kids’ sporting events prompted a lively response on both sides of a consistent and challengin­g parenting issue: The pressure sports programs place on players and their parents, who are frequently required to travel to games on weekends and over holidays.

I encouraged “J” to occasional­ly miss games in order to attend family functions.

Some reader responses are printed below.

DEAR AMY >> As a parent and teenage counselor, I can assure you that you were wrong in telling that father that he should miss some of his children’s sports activities in order to attend family funerals and other family events.

Your child comes first! Those children will always remember parents supporting them. They will not be spoiled because of it.

Shame, shame on you!

— Disappoint­ed

DEAR AMY >> My husband and I were like “J.” We have few regrets about our kids’ sports participat­ion.

However, there were a few occasions where we chose to bail on family get-togethers, funerals, and weddings because our children had sports “obligation­s.”

The fact that I can remember these missed events speaks volumes.

If it were the other way around, would I have remembered the “game we missed” because of a “life” obligation?

I doubt it.

I regret those choices.

— Regretful Mom DEAR AMY >> I think it is sad and wrong that “J’s” mother, and so many other parents, try to put guilt on their grown children for these types of issues.

J is now grown and raising his family the way he and his wife see fit.

They are making the choices that they feel are in the best interest of their now immediate family. This is what his mother did when J was a child at home growing up. This is what parents do for their children and their families. His mother needs to cut the cord and allow her son the freedom without the guilt trips. This is how life works.

Kudos to J and his wife for doing what is in their best interest for their immediate family! — Fellow Supportive

Parent DEAR AMY >> A number of years ago my husband and I decided that rather than flying to California with me and my other daughter for our niece’s wedding, our high school daughter should remain home to play in a basketball tournament because she had made “a commitment to the team.”

In retrospect, I would make an opposite decision: The only thing she remembers about the tournament is that it caused her to miss her dear cousin’s wedding, and that she doesn’t share the memories of that family event.

It helps to step back and ask, “Ten years from now what might we think about this decision?”

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