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Don’t Overload Your Kids

My daughter wants to take dance, gymnastics, swimming, karate and soccer lessons. Oh, she also wants to take a cheerleading class. The thought of enrolling in her all these different types of activities boggles the mind. I know she wants to do it. However, she is five years old and despite her seemingly boundless stores of energy, she can get burned out.

It’s important to me to let her enjoy herself. I want her to be athletic. I want her to be competitive. But most of all, I want her to have fun and to enjoy herself. She takes two dance classes a week and she loves to take them. Occasionally she gets grumpy about it because she knows she could spend 45 minutes playing rather than in a dance class.

A gentle reminder that she likes dance and she’s back into it again, after May and her recital, I told her she could take the summer off from dance. She said she wanted to keep going, but I suggested that she take a dance camp instead.

We’ve been going back and forth on what kind of camps she would like to take, but we’ve settled on at least three different types of camps to take over the summer. The camps will be a week of dedicated activity that will introduce her to different types of physical sports including soccer and karate.

She will also take a reading camp and a zoo camp where she can learn about animals and habitats. The exposure to the different elements of her education is important. It’s dangerous for parents to focus their children too intently into one area of sports or activity. Partially because of the pressure we can exert on them can leave them feeling like they have very few options.

It’s also better for children to have broad based conditioning rather than specialized. Whether playing sports like baseball or soccer, dancing in tap or jazz or performing gymnastics to broaden their horizons. If they don’t – they may build up only specific muscle strength and this can actually lead to greater chances for injury.
Motor skills like hopping, landing, bending, skipping, jumping, running and hanging are all important for your five and six year-olds to be learning to do. Team sports are important, but so are unstructured activities.

So take a page from my book, expose your children to opportunity and don’t limit their options. Explore fitness the best way – through life and fun.

This entry was posted in Exercise and tagged , , , , by Heather Long. Bookmark the permalink.

About Heather Long

Heather Long is 35 years old and currently lives in Wylie, Texas. She has been a freelance writer for six years. Her husband and she met while working together at America Online over ten years ago. They have a beautiful daughter who just turned five years old. She is learning to read and preparing for kindergarten in the fall. An author of more than 300 articles and 500+ web copy pieces, Heather has also written three books as a ghostwriter. Empty Canoe Publishing accepted a novel of her own. A former horse breeder, Heather used to get most of her exercise outside. In late 2004, early 2005 Heather started studying fitness full time in order to get herself back into shape. Heather worked with a personal trainer for six months and works out regularly. She enjoys shaking up her routine and checking out new exercises. Her current favorites are the treadmill (she walks up to 90 minutes daily) and doing yoga for stretching. She also performs strength training two to three times a week. Her goals include performing in a marathon such as the Walk for Breast Cancer Awareness or Team in Training for Lymphoma research. She enjoys sharing her knowledge and experience through the fitness and marriage blogs.