I know this thread has drifted quite a ways from talking about our workouts, but I have enjoyed reading the comments about youth sports. I'm not going to tell somebody how to spend their money and I'm sure not going to tell them how to support their kids' dreams and activities, but when I think about youth sports, I always think about Michael Phelps.
By that, I mean, what if Michael Phelps had never been exposed to competitive swimming? I suspect for the vast majority of us, if we were one of the most naturally gifted swimmers in the world, we likely would have never known it. For most of us, swimming is something we do in the backyard pool, at the beach, or in the lake, where we likely would have never discovered we can swim faster than everyone else we know. By the third grade, we generally know who the fastest runners in school are and who is already excelling at basketball, football, soccer, etc. If Phelps had grown up like most kids, he might have dreamt of being a basketball player. And with his 6'4" frame and athleticism, there's a good chance he might have been pretty good at it. But he wasn't going to be the best that ever lived in that sport. Fortunately for him, he happened to grow up with particular circumstances that allowed him to discover the thing in the world he was better at than everyone else. Same for people like Eric Heiden, Lance Armstrong, Jack Nicklaus, etc. It's easy for a kid to grow up with no access to any of those sports. Or, what if Yo Yo Ma had grown up without access to musical instruments?
I don't have the answers for how to expose kids to every activity under the sun until you find the one they are great at, nor would I try to do that. But when you think about all the incredible talents out there, I do wonder if our focus on the sports we see on TV regularly creates an awfully narrow spectrum of aspirations for our kids. As for the advice to not let anyone talk you out of achieving your dreams, I would offer that if Michael Jordan had rigidly adhered to his childhood dreams, he would have ended up being . . . a minor league baseball player. Fortunately for him, circumstances or people persuaded him to focus on the sport at which he was best.