I played a lot of sport as a kid. Tennis, dancing, netball, swimming, surfing, sailing, skiing – you name it, I probably gave it a go at some point or another.
Mind you, I wasn’t naturally sporty or particularly good at anything. But I loved it all, especially the team sports. There’s something so special about competing for something with a big group of people; the pep talks, the encouragement, the shared disappointment at a loss or the shared exhilaration at a win.
We’re lucky in Australia in that we’re such an outdoor nation. Every kid finds a passion for something, whether it be cricket or water polo or rowing or horse riding or tap dancing. And there are such great opportunities available to those who want to go further, who want to kick those goals and become the best they can possibly be.
But there’s another side to the sport story. The side that playing sport can be expensive, as well as time-consuming and not particularly convenient. Some sports transcend from hobbies into lifestyles, with kids making other sacrifices to continue playing their sport.
With that in mind, I had a chat to a couple of athletes about why they think it’s so important for kids to play sport.
The first? 16-year-old Tahlia Tupaea. The teenager plays basketball for the Sydney Flames, a basketball club that’s committed to developing elite young NSW female athletes. She signed for the club for the 2012-2013 season and officially became the second youngest debutant in WNBL history. Pretty impressive.
Top Comments
I come from a very sporty and active family. Grew up being taught how to throw a ball, ride a bike, jump on a trampoline and play backyard cricket. Did gymnastics, athletics, played netball and rounders in school. I discovered in my teens that I was much better suited to individual sorts of sports rather than playing as part of a team, because I'm really competitive and I used to get really angry when someone on my team put in a poor performance. I get terrible white line fever, so I found that it was better if I was just on my own competing, rather than very unfairly blaming my team mates if we lost.
There were lots of times when I didn't enjoy it, but I'm so glad as a adult that I'm in tune with my body as a result. During boxing classes recently there were lots of women there who hadn't done any exercise in their entire lives, and just the concept of being out of breath and sweating and being physically uncomfortable was totally foreign to them. Some of these women were in their forties and had never actually stretched before so were not clear on how to stretch their quads or calf muscles.
It's so important to be in tune with your body. To know what kind of pain is acceptable and what kind of pain means that something is wrong. Anecdotally, women who are sporty and active fair better during childbirth, and my own experience of watching them doing it has suggested to me that it's true.
Sport is great! But only if you are good at it.
That's how it comes across anyway. :/