Why I Don’t Want My Kids To Be “The Best” at Anything

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My six-year-old daughter played on a mixed-gender soccer team in the fall, and stood out as one of the best athletes in the league. Even at a young age, coaches anparents see something in her that other kids may develop, but don’t quite have yet. She has natural talent and a drive — to not only want to win, but to play well.

Another parent asked if I was going to sign her up for indoor soccer so she could keep improving her skills throughout the winter. If I were only thinking about my daughter’s soccer abilities, it would have been really easy to jump on that idea. More soccer equals better soccer right? And don’t I want her to be better? To be the best? 

No. At least, not now.  

While winter soccer could be a really great option for my daughter, it coincides with basketball season — and she also likes basketball. It would be up to her to decide what sport — if any sport — she wanted to do. Between her young age and the fact that I also have her siblings’ schedules to juggle, the chances were slim to none that my daughter would play both sports. But more importantly: I wanted to offer my kids a balance of extracurricular opportunities as well as unstructured timeJust because they are great at something doesn’t mean they will be driven to follow that thing forever.

Yes, I want my daughter and my other two children to excel in life — but narrowing their focus is not the way to do it. 

In Malcolm Gladwell’s book, Outliers, he explains that 10,000 hours of practicing a specific task is the key to success in any field. But what if the key to success is not practicing one thing for 10,000 hours but immersing ourselves, or more specifically our kids, in a lifetime of diverse activities to give life to that one passion that will drive our — and their — success?  

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