It’s a common parental dilemma: should I go to my child’s school swimming carnival?
A generation ago, it wasn’t an issue. Kids swam in carnivals, ran in races, stripped skin from their knees on asphalt netball courts without parents on the sidelines, wringing their hands.
That may be a slight exaggeration – sometimes parents would go to their kids’ sport, but often only if it was a final or there was no public transport available. My father used to sit in the car and read the paper during my tennis matches. I never thought twice about it.
I do now, though. I think about it often. There’s a feeling these days we should be our kids’ audience – their roving cheer squad. Like groupies, we must never miss a show.
It’s tough. Full time stay-at-home parents are rare, especially once kids are at school. There’s work to be done, younger children who need naps and (not to put too fine a point on it) sometimes you’d rather clean the oven.
But how do you decide what events to attend and which to skip? In a spirt of helpfulness, I offer the following guide:
Does your child care whether you’re there or not?
You might think she does, but question her carefully! Does she want you in the stands because your presence is affirming? Or does she want you there because you’re a source of cash for the canteen and an early lift home? If this is the case (as it often is), save yourself the angst and wish her luck. You might be troubled about what other parents think … ‘Poor Zola. A solid 4th in the noodle race and no mummy there to post it on Facebook.’ They may do it for you, in which case, click ‘Like’.
Did your child train for the carnival? Is he a swimmer?
If your answered yes, then you should make every effort to go. Applaud his effort, support his commitment.
Top Comments
thanks for this. amnazing article. enabled me to get some perspective in a current dilemma!
My mother came to my sports games...only to point out and criticise all of my errors the instant I came off the court/field. Never a warm word. I would have preferred she had stayed at home.