TeamSnap Logo
Log inFind My Team
  • Products
    • Organizations logoClubs & Leagues

      For clubs, leagues & associations with multiple teams

      • Sports
      • Features
      • Get a demo
    • Teams logoTeams

      The easiest way to manage a team

      • Sports
      • Features
    • Tournaments logoTournaments

      Build and manage your events in a snap

      • Scheduling
      • Registration
  • Pricing
    • Organization logoClubs & Leagues
    • Teams logoTeams
  • Company
    • About
    • For Brands
    • Careers Hiring!
  • Resources NEW!
    • Blog
    • Holiday Guide NEW!
    • Coaches’ Corner NEW!
    • Return To Play
    • Clubs & Leagues Resources
    • Help Center
    • API Docs

Find My Team

Sign upLog in
Sign upLog in
Blog/ Health and Safety / 3 Ways To Help Your Child Build Mental S…

3 Ways To Help Your Child Build Mental Strength Through Sports

by TeamSnap | Sep 17, 2015 | Category: Health and Safety, How To, Sports Parents


Share This:

Let’s face it: most athletes, particularly teenage athletes, are mentally under-trained. While they might acknowledge that the mind is important to their sport, they don’t always have a plan to integrate mental skills into their physical training. Just like physical skills, there are some mental skills that athletes have, and some that they need to learn.

Soccer-Player_webWhen kids play sports, they learn things they don’t learn elsewhere. We’re all familiar with the important lessons gained through participation in sports, such as teamwork, goal-setting, perseverance, responsibility, and dedication. And these lessons involve skills that make up mental strength.

Dr. Mara Smith, a sports psychologist who consults with various national governing bodies including USA Hockey, USA Gymnastics, US Figure Skating, USA Bobsled and USA Luge, offers three ways parents can help their kids understand and build their mental strength through sports.

Let your kids fail in sport.

There is tremendous importance in learning through failure, and sports are a great way to learn this lesson. After all, losing is often mistaken as failure (losing is experiencing failure). But failure is not only a huge part of understanding the values of achievement, it’s the way kids learn to deal with adversity. Shielding or preventing kids from failure because we don’t want them to be disappointed is a disservice because it takes away the ability for a parent to help a child through difficulty.

Bring focus to process, not just outcome.

We’ve all dealt with the “win-at-all-cost” mentality, a glaring example of focus on outcome. It can blind us all. Learn ways to help your child understand the importance of setting goals that they are actually in control of—keeping their feet moving, staying in the moment, not using negative self talk, etc. These are called “process goals” and they allow a connection between expectations, hopes, dreams and the steps to get there.

Let the experience belong to your child!

Your young athlete can learn a lot when you give them responsibility. For example, if your child forgets his or her equipment for the game, don’t go back home to retrieve it. If your child gets the missing equipment instead, he/she will remember to check and make sure everything’s there next time. If you save your young athlete because you “feel badly” or “the team is depending on them,” there’s a good chance it will happen again. The most impactful and meaningful learning happens when the athlete owns the sport experience.

Mark Goldberg is publisher of PrimeAthlete, a monthly newsletter for parents of teenage athletes that debuted last month. Here’s a link to the first edition. To subscribe to PrimeAthlete, including a free subscription option, please go to: www.primeathlete.com/subscribe. 


Share This:

Sign Up for TeamSnap

Follow Us

  • RSS Feed
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Search blog archives:

Sign Up For Free
no credit card required

Categories

    Try TeamSnap for Free!

    TeamSnap is the easiest way to manage your sports team online.Try it for free and see for yourself how easy it can be.

    Create Your Team Today!

    It’s Free and Free is Good!

    Sign Up Your Team!Free and Paid Plans Available
    Products
    Club or League Administrators
    • Get a demo
    • Features
    • Pricing
    • Tournaments
    • FAQs
    Coaches or Team Managers
    • Features
    • Pricing
    • Tournaments
    • Get Started
    Parents or Athletes
    • Features
    • Pricing
    • Find My Team
    • Get Started
    Sports
    Clubs & Leagues
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Ice Hockey
    • Lacrosse
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Volleyball
    Teams
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Ice Hockey
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • +100s more
    Resources
    • Blog
    • Holiday Guide NEW!
    • Coaches’ Corner NEW!
    • Return To Play
    • Clubs & Leagues Resource Library
    • Skills & Drills
    • Press Releases
    • TeamSnap Help Center
    • Community
    • Why TeamSnap?
    Company
    • About
    • Careers Hiring!
    • For Brands
    • Lab Rats Program
    • TeamSnap API
    • Responsible Disclosure Policy
    • Youth sports team and sports org app Apple App Store Logo
    • Youth sports team and sports org app Google Play Store Logo
    • social-media-facebook
    • social-media-twitter
    • social-pinterest
    • social-instagram
    • social-video-youtube
    • professional-network-linkedin

    TeamSnap Footer Logo

    Copyright © 2005–2023 TeamSnap, Inc.

    • Sitemap
    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • California Privacy
    • Do not sell my personal information – CA resident only