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samcarter14
Guest
My husband is a guy, and I asked him what he would tell our son if the same situation applied. He said, “I’d tell him that he doesn’t need to put up with being treated like that. NOBODY deserves to be taunted or put down. There’s a way to motivate people without making them feel like ****.”While I am all for your son leaving football if that is his intention… I just want to say a word to the Moms here.
Stop applying women’s rules to a guy thing. The coach doing all that taunting is a guy thing. Using certain words may not be correct but it’s a guy thing. This is a teenage boy who is going to be junior in high school. He’s not a baby who needs to be shielded from this kind of thing by Mommy. Unless Dad is jumping in and saying, “Enough!” then it’s probably not too much.
The guy taunting stuff alone is not reason enough for the son to leave football IMO. That could be considered quitting (in they guy world.) But leaving football in order to pursue some (reasonable) other thing that is more meaningful to the son is a part of life. Trying out for baseball is certainly reasonable.
As the mother of three boys, I grow tired of hearing people say, “Oh, such-and-such is a guy thing” when it’s a negative thing. No, the kid is not a baby, but coaches–especially when they are also teachers at the school—do not need to be putting down their players verbally or punishing them unequally. Using nasty language and put downs isn’t a “guy” thing, it’s a “stupid human thing”, IMO.