Our Adventures at Skating
So skating started at the beginning of the month
and while it’s been somewhat hit-and-miss so far for Baby, it’s been a huge
success for the Boy, at least compared to last year. I think he remembers that by the end of the
season last year he really loved skating lessons and skating in general, so
when lessons started this time around he was absolutely gung-ho to get going,
get on the ice and get skating. He’s
doing great so far too. Which when I
think back to this time last year, is a huge load off my shoulders.
At least until I turn my attention to Baby.
She really wanted to skate this year. After watching her big brother and sister
doing all of their ‘stuff’ last season, she really just wanted to be a part of
the action (resulting in her registration in both gymnastics and skating). She was all for it when we were buying
helmets and trying to find skates, trying on skates and getting ready for the
season. Then we got there and started
putting everything on, and sort of like what happened with the Boy last year,
she suddenly just wasn’t sure that she really wanted to do it. A horrible time to suddenly change her mind,
because by this point we’ve already spent the money on equipment and
registration fees, and it places both the Husband (who was home for the first
day) and I in that awkward position of either being the ‘mean parents’ who have
to force her to get on the ice regardless of what she wants, or accepting her
change of mood and giving her an out.
The Boy did the same thing, to various and
differing degrees (just in comparison to himself) from week to week during his
whole first season (when he was 3-years-old) and for the first month and a half
of the season last year. During that
first season he was all over the place in regards to whether he wanted to be
there, be skating or whatever. One week
he’d happily go out on the ice, try for a few minutes and then sit with the
bucket of toys and play for the rest of the 45-minute session. The next week he wouldn’t even make any
attempt to try and do anything and would only sit on the ice and cry until the
instructors would carry him off.
Eventually they did manage to motivate him to some effort but that first
season was questionably a write off as far as actually learning how to skate
was concerned.
Last year for the first 6 weeks the Boy would
grudgingly put his skates, helmet and other gear on, then he’d have a complete
meltdown and temper tantrum, refusing to get on the ice, go near the ice or even
do more than watch the ice being flooded before and after the sessions. It was painful, for me and the Husband, and
truth be told there were a couple days when I was nearly in tears – of frustration,
anger, embarrassment… you name it. Then,
miraculously, one day we got his gear on and he just nervously wandered out on
to the ice. (Of course this was right
about the time we started considering whether we should just pull him from the
program and try to get some of our money back, and when we’d finally stopped
trying to constantly convince him that he really did want to skate.)
Now I’m sure you’re wondering, what was the
lesson that I learned over the last two years with the Boy? If the initial interest to do something is
there, (whether it’s skating lessons, gymnastics, dancing, piano, horseback
riding, or whatever) sometimes it’s just going to take time for them to be ready to actually try. All we can do as parents is give them time. It’s frustrating, and can be annoying, but
the more you try to convince them to do it, the more you push, or bribe, or
fight about it, the harder it’ll be for them to make up their mind. And as I’ve come to learn with the Princess -
if it’s not something that they really, truly
want to do and if it’s not something that they’re even remotely enjoying, they’re
not going to do it. No matter how much
you want them to or how much money you’ve spent so that they could.
We spent less 5 minutes convincing the Baby to
try out the ice during the first lesson.
She lasted 30 minutes on the ice and she actually managed to do okay.
(See the pictures below.) The day of her
second lesson, she’d already dug her heels in hours before the actual lesson
time, and told me that she wasn’t going to skate that day. I just told that she didn’t she didn’t have
to go on the ice if she didn’t want to, that she could just sit with me and
watch but that she was going to wear her skates, helmet and other gear while
she did it. I asked her 4 or 5 times
during the minutes leading up to the lesson time and for the first few minutes
of the lesson if she was sure that she just wanted to watch, each time she told
me that she just didn’t want to skate that day.
I didn’t pester her overly much, or try and force her on the ice at all,
though the Princess (who was able to be there that day because there was no
school) bugged her about it a bit. And
would you believe that about half way through the lesson time, she decided that
she’d go out and try after all? She
mostly went out and played with the toys that the instructors had out on the
ice, but she decided to go out there all on her own. And I experienced barely any stress over the
matter, which is also a major bonus!
The Boy was happy to just get out there and go!
While the Baby started her lesson this way -->
Things progressed more or less like this...
And for Baby ended like this.
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