I was taking a break from organizing the seminar I am presenting in Ireland later on this month and decided to flip on the television... which is odd because I NEVER do that.
I couldn’t believe what I saw...
A show called ‘Tiara Girls’ was on. It profiles the trials and tribulations of teenage girls as they prepare to compete in local beauty pageants.
This particular episode was keyed in on the preparatory timetable of a 15 year old contestant who was vying for the prize of Miss Regional Michigan. Certainly not Miss America, but important to this young lady none the less.
Now, this is not an indictment on pageants or the people who compete in them. This article is meant to illustrate to you how incredibly disastrous any type of youth-based competition truly can be when adults decide to get there greedy little hands involved.
Here’s a recap of the horror I witnessed -
- This young lady’s Mom and Dad routinely (... and I mean DAILY) called this girl fat as a means of ‘motivating’ her to lose weight.
- At one particular point in the show, Dad ordered pizza for dinner. As the family sat and ate together, Dad let lose a tirade about how fat his daughter had become and how little she ‘obviously’ cared about re-gaining a thin appearance.
- Mom didn’t like the way her daughter’s face looked, so decided to pay for lip injections as a means of ‘improving’ the girls smile. The procedure was painful, but Mom was happy with the results.
- Mom tried on several different occasions to convince her daughter that the extreme solution of dirautetics was warranted in order for her daughter to become thin.
- Dad shelled out THOUSANDS of dollars each year on pageant related necessities for his daughter... and summarily used this as leverage when berating the girl for being fat, unattractive and not ‘motivated’.
- Mom and Dad hired an ‘interview’ coach for their daughter as a means of making her ‘sharper’ for the interview portion of the pageant. The interview coach spent a few hours explaining to this young lady that she came off as ‘stupid’ and didn’t even have the skills enough ‘stand’ properly.
- At one point, the teenager had enough of the stress while her Mom was berating her for not wanting to win badly enough. Mom suggested that she re-compose herself in her room and just take a few minutes to calm down. The second the teenager was in the confines of her own room (hoping to decompress a little), Mom came charging in after her and continued the verbal assault.
I couldn’t take it anymore and decided to change the channel.
Here are the lessons I learned from the 20 minutes I watched -
- If I belittle young people long enough and play to their insecurities, I will eventually wear them down and elicit the changes that I feel are necessary for them.
- I can provide poor lifestyle conditions but still expect young people to create success in spite of them (in case you missed my sarcasm above... you want your daughter to lose weight, so you order a pizza for dinner and then berate her for having the gull to eat a slice?).
- I can put young people through physical pain so long as I get what I want out of it... even if that means destroying their self-image.
- The most effective way of teaching young people how to succeed is to suggest radical and potentially dangerous procedures or lifestyle habits.
- I can decide to make sacrifices for young people on my own accord... so long as I can use my sacrifices against them when it serves me to do so.
- It’s not about young people... it’s about me and what I can get from them.
You may be feeling said for that poor teenager and realize the life of low self-esteem she is almost surely to lead.
You may have enjoyed my satirical writing.
You may be feeling as though pageants are awful and feel terribly for the girls who compete in them.
Are you looking in the mirror though?
If you are a parent...
Does your child’s making the ‘best’ travel team in your community mean more to you or them?
If you are a coach...
Does winning this weekends baseball tournament impact your life more so than your teams?
If you are a trainer...
Does increasing your athletes’ vertical jump in 6 weeks mean that they will have a life-long skill that positively effects their sporting success and injury rate or that you will have yet another testimonial to show everyone how successful you are?
Go back and re-read every single point I referenced while watching that show. Now, take this time to change the sentences and apply them to youth soccer, baseball, hockey, football etc.
If an emotional response is generating inside of you right now, maybe it’s time you took a good look at yourself.
Feel free to let me know what you think about this article -
brian@developingathletics.com
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