| Open Letter to Optimist Parents |
|
|
| Written by Michael McCann |
|
The letter below might be of interest to some Optimist (and other) parents. An Open Letter to Every "Sailing" Parent in the World
I wanted to write and show my appreciation by giving you something in return; to thank you for all you give the sport. I am going to give you some ideas and advice to help you be the best sailing parent you can be and to help you help your kids enjoy their sailing to the extent of their talent and to the limits of their dreams. The training alone is not enough - the development of the person is far more important and far more enduring. I love sailing. And I would love your child to be a world record holder and Olympic champion. But I would prefer that your kids become better people through the experience of being involved in this great sport. If they happen to also sail fast.....that is a bonus. Your child's coach. Choose your coach carefully. Meet with them. Talk with them. Regularly communicate with them (away from the program and outside of training times). And once you have made the decision to entrust the development of your child to a particular coach, give that coach 100% total commitment, dedication and support. If you can't...find another coach. Partial support will not withstand the ups and downs of competitive sailing. 100% committed support - the same support you give your child and the same 100% committed support you want FROM the coach must also given by you TO the coach. Your role as a sailing parent - how you can help. I was asked to stay with the family and enjoy a few days with them. The kids both sail and asked me if I would be interested in getting up early with them the next morning for practice. Of course I said "yes". I set my alarm for 5 am, got up and dressed. It was then the strangest thing happened. Another alarm went off..........in the mother's room. Mom got up. Got dressed. Rushed into the kitchen and made a cup of coffee for herself and two mugs of hot chocolate for the children. She then rushed around the house gathering up sailing gear, towels, spray tops, bailers and filled water bottles. She then put all of these things in the kids' gear bags and put the bags near the front door. She then tapped gently on the kids' bedroom doors and said, "Darling, it is time to go sailing". The kids responded, "I'm not going. I hate sailing. It's too cold" and some other stuff. Mom then reversed the car out of the garage, carried both gear bags out to the car. Meanwhile one of kids was still in bed and had rolled over and gone back to sleep. The other was sitting on their bed saying "I'm tired. I'm tired" over and over again. Mom helped both kids out of bed, helped them put on their rash guards and boots and helped them out to the kitchen table. The kids weren't even drinking their hot chocolate....they were sitting and moaning and groaning and complaining about sailing and being cold and how it was "too early". Mom then helped the kids into the car - one laid down in the back seat and went to sleep while the other put his head on the car window and fell asleep. Mom and I talked about this and that on the way to the club. When we got there, Mom jumped out, helped the kids out of the car and carried their bags down to the dock. The kids trained ok and I enjoyed watching the practice while Mom went off doing something else. After training, Mom came back, embraced the kids with "Hi my angels. How was practice?" The kids answered, "OK" and then sat quietly all the way home intent on their personal video games. When they got home, the kids went in to shower, while Mom emptied their gear bags, made their dinner and ironed their clothes for school the next day. I was a bit surprised she didn't also do their homework!!!!! Sound familiar? I suspect these scenes or something very similar were also played out in your own home many days. The most important thing you can do to help your child achieve their sailing goals is to help them develop as a person with real independence and self management skills. You prepare them for life......let the coach prepare them to sail fast. The three of you - parent, coach and child - working together is an unstoppable force!!! Once again sincere thanks for your involvement in this great sport and on behalf of everyone in sailing, my appreciation for your contribution and ongoing support. Yours faithfully, |
| Fri, Sep 10th Masts & Rigging White Sail Fun Race |
| Sat, Sep 11th 420 Nationals |
| Sat, Sep 11th National 18 South Coast Championship |
| Sat, Sep 11th Optimist Burns Trophy |
| Sat, Sep 11th Mixed Dinghy League |