Competitive Wellness Series - Raising Athletes from Day One

Youth Sports have become big business. The fact that I exist in the form of a training business specializing in training children and young adults is a testament to that. Parents are “recognizing” the potential benefit that comes with raising a young superstar, often without a firm grasp on the reality of the world of competitive sports. (Let’s be serious, if you want to raise a top-tier athlete, find an obscure sport for him/her to specialize in from an early age. But better keep your fingers crossed that it actual aligns with his/her passion or you’re going to spend a lot of money on a neat childhood hobby). The reality, however, is that the push toward early specialization and over-training leads to burnout and over-use injuries later in life.

There is a way to progressively prepare your child for the demands of a childhood athletic “profession” while simultaneously teaching him/her how to live well, and it starts at birth.

I will always be a proponent of youth sports. Yes I have some reservation about the “trophy for everyone” trend, but that really starts to exist a little bit later in childhood. If a plastic, mass-produced trophy inspires, motivates, and captures a child’s interest to continue to play a sport, stay healthy, and make life-long friends, then by all means lets keep filling parents’ attics and basements with them. But even before this “don’t you want to try soccer?!” pitch to your five or six year old, you could have already prepared your child to maximize the experience.

From birth to about 6 years old, your child is navigating the world learning how to survive. The early years, obviously, are reliant upon the parents until - roughly - ideally - the age of 3 or so. (Now before you think I’m saying that a 3 year-old is an independent human, I’m simply saying that by this point in his/her life, there is a capability to begin a continuous practice of independence). Within these years, you will always find (hopefully) numerous suggested resources about the benefit of allowing your child to explore, struggle, fall, etc. in order to gain a better feel for the world and build a healthy relationship with life’s obstacles and create the foundation of Confidence. The child is finding his/her strengths, weaknesses, powers, and powerlessnesses. All of this weaves a netting upon which to fall back on once the child hits 6 and starts exploring his/her place in the bigger world.

Failure is a part of sports. It is the nature of the beast. I’m not sure of any study that actually investigates all of the different forms of failure, but I’m sure it would be an area of study unto itself. (Consider me a candidate for my Master’s in Failure). The relationship that is formed between a child and “failure” (and its many different forms) is one of the true pillars of success in life. This is letting your child make a mistake and not over-reacting to a skinned knee. This is supporting your child’s teacher when the child is reprimanded instead of looking for an excuse and a reason it is someone else’s fault. This is, “Man, that must be frustrating, I wonder if there are ways you can avoid that happening next time?”.

The young athletes with poor attitudes often show a lack of resilience in their everyday lives. The young athletes that quit mid-season are often the ones who have been allowed to quit at things throughout their lives. The young athletes that give an excuse for performance are often the ones whose excuses have been accepted by their major influencers previously.

Building an athlete out of a child takes, first, the passion and commitment of the child - the true love of the game and understanding of competition. He/she should be the primary voice in what activities he/she does or does not participate in (after a certain age; again, making the decision for a young child to “try” a sport, even if for the experience of sticking out a full season of something, is still ok. They are children, after all, what do they know.).

But after that, it isn’t x-hours per week with a specialist trainer. It isn’t house league, plus traveling team, plus AAU. It isn’t “choose which sport you want to focus on or you won’t make it” or “Honey I know you love that but you don’t have time for that in your schedule”.

It IS the simple, wonderful, continuously-challenging act of raising a child, a person, who understands hard work, disappointment, success and celebration, camaraderie, selflessness, and grit, that is learned through (passively supervised for the sake of safety and being a parent) independence and own-life experience.

Remember early-humans didn’t become great hunters because matriarch said to stay home because it’s dangerous and you might get hurt…or took an already-dead prey and puppeteered it so the new-hunter thought he had been successful.

(I know that’s a stretch, but for real, “raising athletes” is simply “raising good people”, so start there).

Competitive Wellness Series - The Mantra

Our daily routines define us. (Equally, not having daily routines defines us just the same, no implication that either is "right" or "better", but let's consider not having a routine, a routine, for the sake of simplicity of the first sentence of this blog post). 

Our daily routines range from our actions, to our words, to our thoughts. Each choice we make is establishing, within us, avenues. However, this is not like the continuous and endless construction to highways where you have some time to adjust either to warning signs, receive detour help, or know well in advance that work is going to be done on a specific path. No, this is a labyrinth. This is ever-changing, change-resulting, resulting-madness toward personal transcendence. Our improvement being the reward for the struggles and efforts.

Ok, deep breath. Example: It rains on a day you were planning on an outdoor activity. You become upset. You emotionally attach to the weather via your disappointment. The next time it rains, plans or not, you remember that disappointment. There's potential, after a few more, unchecked, rainy days, that you simply become disappointed when it rains. (Oversimplified, yes, but check the science on it). 

It doesn't take much for us to fall into emotional, mental, and physical responses to our environment. But simple, controlled thoughts and actions can help us regain control. 

Enter: the Mantra. Traditionally having a religious connotation, a mantra is simply a sound, word, or slogan repeated frequently to aid in concentration and focus. 

Something that is yours that you can inject into your life at the positive moments to enhance or at the negative moments to regain control and perspective is as accessible as a single, deliberate word. 

Think of the applications. Work becomes overwhelming before you even arrive at the office because of something that happened at home or on the road to work. Reset with your mantra. You need a boost of confidence before trying something new. Re-energize with your mantra. You're faced with a pressure situation. Relax with your mantra. 

Think of the implications. Comfort, confidence, dominance, a perspective that allows for minimized damage and maximized growth. 

The practice of reciting a mantra has no minimum age limit. I mean, personally it would be more relevant when we knew words and had an awareness of our selves. But does not a soothing sound repeated to a distressed infant have the same positive effect? 

Young athletes, now is the time to begin your practice of mantras. Pre-game, in-game, post-game, there is no bad time to reset your mind to the purpose at hand. Find something simple and begin applying it in safe situations. Get out of bed in the morning to a mantra of positivity and success for the coming day. As you gain confidence in your own ability to gain confidence, to feel control, begin to apply this to all aspects of life. In time you'll find that standing at the free-throw line in the final minute of a close game is nothing a few words can't knock down. (Or some other cliched sports ending). 

Suggested searches: mantra, neural pathways, mantras and muscle memory

______________________________

I've got my new one all primed for the new school year, focusing on being present and maximizing the moments. 

Become now.

I've also put it on a shirt, feel free to jump on board: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/MoralCompassTraining/become+now?q=I1017294747 

Competitive Wellness Series - New Skills and Repetition

For the student-athletes out there, there is no greater time than Summer. The dedicated will wake up early, maybe attend some camps at a local school, and then your day is over. Often the dedication of time to your specific sport, or specific school, is only one month of two. It’s a time to relax, not think about school, and be outside (weather permitting). 

However, this time is the ultimate decider of improvement and/or success the following year. To be given time-off, with varying degrees of responsibilities, but a good deal of flexibility, is a gift that not many people receive. Even if you are working a summer job as a student, rarely is it going to demand from you after-hours the way school does. (If there is a case where it does, it is probably the aim and focus of your improvement anyway). Now is the time to maximize growth!

Ideally, you leave the summer with one less weakness...at minimum. Can’t kick with your left foot? Summer. Can’t finish around the rim? Summer. Inconsistent when back-setting? Summer. If there is something your coach has told you to work on, or part of your game that you know holds you back from the next level of achievement, Summer is the time to eliminate this blemish from your scouting report. If you return to season with the same holes in your game that you ended the season with, there is no one to blame but yourself. 

Sometimes these improvements are going to require new motor memory. Think of our neural pathways as hiking trails. When the same route is taken over and over, a groove is created in the earth. The same is true in your brain. There can be a lot of initial frustration in learning an “old skill” a new way. “Why should I change my shot now?”, “I do alright the way I’ve been doing it until now”, etc. But what you are asking of yourself is not to go back and cover that path with dirt, replant the grass or brush, and make it look like no one has ever gone down that path before. You are simply choosing to start a new path, often from some point along the one already there, and run over it again and again until your brain “knows” that is the way that we always take.

Another aspect of this training, and one that will be discussed more in-depth in another post, is visualization. There have been numerous studies showing that when you mentally rehearse a skill, your body does not know the difference between action and thought. Therefore, those reps that you go through in bed before falling asleep may also count toward your daily total of repetition. 

Don’t waste your summer! Be honest with yourself about where your game needs improvement and set aside time to make sure you go back to school with one less weakness, a new confidence, and a peace of mind having taken a different path. 

Oh, and this doesn’t apply just to sports. Though many of us don’t have “summers off” to devote to our training, it doesn’t take much to recognize weaknesses and address them for a few moments a day. Simple mental rehearsal and repetition may make us all a little bit better. 

Suggested searches: Motor memory, muscle memory, motor sequencing, imagining exercise, visualization muscle growth