By NAT HAWK
When I was eight, my main life goal was to be a tap dancer. I desperately wanted to take up tap-dancing, and I had great faith in my own ability to take it beyond my childhood and into a career.
There was only one problem – we couldn’t afford the lessons.
I begged, I pleaded, I offered to swap out my pocket money for tap shoes. But we didn’t have the spare cash to give to another term’s worth of dancing lessons, and I had to give up on the tap-dancing dream.
The good part of this story was that I really wasn’t missing out. I already did ballet, jazz and musical theatre lessons, as well as weekly swimming lessons and the odd tennis school holiday camp.
But I was a lucky kid. A kid whose parents could afford to say yes to some things, and no to other things.
There are a lot of kids out there whose parents have to say no to everything. They’re not playing footy, or cricket, or soccer, or doing karate or dancing lessons. They’re not playing any sport – just because so much of it has become so prohibitively expensive.
A few weeks ago, a recent poll in Canada made news when it found that a third of Canadian kids, aged between three and 17, don’t participate in organised sport because of the equipment and registration fees involved – 61% of parents said that enrolment fees were the main issue, and 52% said equipment costs were holding them back.
Top Comments
In my experience (I'm not a parent but I'm 22 and see a lot of what my parents do spend on us) and, sure its not the cheapest thing to do if your paying in one hit, but most is for insurance. Sporting clubs won't let you play unless you do have it because injuries happen.
My parents have put myself and my 3 siblings (2 sisters and 1 brother) through at least 2 sports since we were young (about 10). All 3 girls have played representative sport which involves games around Victoria (travelling 1 hr to and from games at least every 2nd week). Along with that all 3 girls play basketball and netball through the week (at least 2 games each) and my brother players volleyball, dodgeball and basketball at the moment. We aren't the most well off family, but also aren't poor.
I understand that my mum and dad prioritise sport because it is a healthy pass time where you meet lifelong friends. I think we have added it up and it comes to over 100/week plus insurance. It may seem like a lot but that is for 6 people - $20-25 a week (including insurance) for socialising, getting exercise, contributing to overall health and in my younger years being taught resilience, skills and making friends that have lasted a long time doesn't seem like a lot to me.
Our kids don't take part in Saturday sport due to custody issues - we don't know when dad will show up and thanks to work during the week, they can't make training.
I don't see how dad not showing up stops them taking part in sport?