Posts Tagged ‘Opening Ceremonies’

Maintaining Focus in a multi-competition event

Monday, July 5th, 2010

While all the fans were out partying during the FIFA Soccer World Cup, the teams had to stay focused for their next game .  One of the hardest parts of a multi-competition event is the challenge of staying mentally and physically sharp and focused.  Here are five tips to help your child stay focused the next time he has multiple games or races on his schedule.

Five Tips To Help Your Child Stay Focused.

Keep The Celebrating Brief 

You and your child can be thrilled with each win of the event, but the ultimate goal isn’t accomplished until the final match has been played.  It’s important to acknowledge the success and use it as positive momentum for the next game, but don’t dwell on it and become lackadaisical.  In the midst of celebrating it is easy to cut a cool down short or forget to re-hydrate; these mistakes could be costly during the next competition.

Get Healthy

If your child has a nagging injury or soreness from his previous competition he needs to address it immediately after the competition.  Whether it be taping his ankle, seeing his chiropractor, getting a massage, stretching or icing down his sore muscles, he needs to address his physical condition promptly. 

  • He won’t always feel one hundred percent for his next game; he’ll likely feel some fatigue from his previous competitions, but staying on top of his physical condition will help him feel as  close to it as possible.

 Asses His Next Opponent

  • The first thing your child needs to do after a victory in a tournament is get mentally ready for what comes next. He needs to know when his next competition is and who he is competing against. 

This is the time for him, his team and coach to asses the new opponent and learn his or her strengths and weaknesses.  Not every opponent is the same and your child may need to change his strategy for the new opponent.

Keep A Routine

Throughout your child’s competitions you want to encourage him to be a little self absorbed.  While he should enjoy the friends and family who are there to support him, it isn’t the time for him to be accommodating everyone else’s schedule. 

  • He needs to get plenty of rest; that means going to bed at a reasonable hour and getting naps if at all possible.
  • He should eat familiar and healthy meals; during a tournament isn’t the time for him to try Thai for the first time or to be eating a lot of greasy fast food.
  • Your child shouldn’t feel obligated to play host to his family and friends.  He need to be at his practices and team meetings prepared and on time.

Enjoy The Festivities With Care

Some Competitions may be a once in a life time opportunity and I encourage your child to enjoy it as long as it doesn’t interfere with or sacrifice his preparation for his next competition.

At the 2000 Olympic Games I was strongly discouraged from participating in the Opening Ceremonies because I competed just two days later.  I knew another athlete who had been discouraged from participating in the 1996 Opening Ceremonies.  He had figured he’d just do it at his next Olympics, but he didn’t make the team four years later.  He never got a chance to experience Opening Ceremonies and he really regretted it.  So, in 2000, despite intense pressure not to, I decided to go.  I took some precautions to make sure the experience wasn’t too taxing; I sat down as much as possible, even on the field during the ceremony, I ditched the official shoes high heals and wore comfy tennis shoes instead, I made sure I stayed hydrated and I went to bed immediately following the ceremonies.  Opening Ceremonies was a phenomenal experience and I have no regrets in my decision, and in case your wondering, I had a personal best two days later.  I was so pumped up from the Ceremonies that it helped motivate and focus me.

  • Your child is there to compete, and win, and that should be his main priority, but despite what some people say, sometimes there is a lot more to a competition than just winning!

These five tips will help your child stay focused on the ultimate goal.  .

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Raising Patriots

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Try this at home……..

Let your child experience the feeling of representing their country through sport. Set up your own podium. You can make a podium out of the steps in your house, different size chairs, boxes or what ever is handy.  Have your child stand on the top step.  Place the American flag in front of them and play the national anthem. 

We live in a great country.  Start teaching your kids to take pride in their country and how blessed they are to live in a country that grants them the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Next visit the website below and check out some flags from other countries. http://flagspot.net/flags/country.html

You can listen to different countries national anthems on this site. http://www.nationalanthems.info/index.html

Taking it a step further……

Have your child pick out a flag they like.  Have them research the country online or at the library and find it on a map.  They can draw the flag on a sheet of paper and on the backside write down three things that they found interesting about the country.

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At the 2000 Summer Olympic Games, I was walking to the stadium with the rest of the U.S. delegation, to participate in Opening Ceremonies.  It was a bit of a walk from our “holding area” to the stadium where the Ceremonies were being held. We could see the stadium up ahead and with each step I got more and more excited.   As we approached the stadium, someone started chanting U.S.A.  Soon everyone was chanting it.  We entered the stadium through a tunnel lit with fluorescent lights.  Above the entrance it read faster, higher, stronger.  (In Greek of course.)  I knew what was on the other side of the tunnel and my whole body buzzed with excitement.  The chanting got louder and louder, USA…USA…USA…USA, it echoed off the walls of the tunnel.  Suddenly the tunnel opened up into the stadium and 100,000 flash bulbs started going off.  There was so much noise.  Up in front, over the mass of heads in front of me, I could see the American Flag.  The sight of it took my breath away.   The flood of emotions in that few seconds was so strong and overwhelming that I don’t think words could do them justice.  For a fraction of a second there seemed to be silence, and I know I wasn’t the only one whose eyes welled up with tears.  In that moment, we went from being the U.S. Cycling team, U.S. Soccer Team, U.S basketball team, etc.….to being the United States Olympic Team.  For the first time, I fully understood what it meant to represent my country and the true spirit of the Olympics.  The Olympics may be one of the only place that truly brings the world together and makes the world, even if just for a moment, set everything else aside.

U.S. cyclists and I pose for a picture with the Iraqi team at the 2004 Olympic Opening Ceremonies.

U.S. cyclists and I pose for a picture with the Iraqi team at the 2004 Olympic Opening Ceremonies.

I feel so honored and blessed to have had the opportunity to represent my country at the Olympics.  I run that moment at the Opening Ceremonies over and over again in my mind, because I don’t ever want to forget it. During my ten years as a professional cyclist, I had an opportunity to travel all over the world: Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, Russia, Malaysia, Germany, France, England, Denmark, Greece, Australia, etc.  No matter how amazing a country was, or even how similar it was to the United States, I found there just wasn’t any place like home. 

I know that very few people will have the opportunity to represent their country on the field of play, but that doesn’t mean that there isn’t a teaching opportunity at every sports event.  While our children are still very young, we as parents can start using sporting events to teach them history, geography, our national heritage, the principles our country was founded on, national pride, and the importance of being educated and involved in our political system. 

If you are from a country other than the United States, I hope you feel the same pride for your country as I do for mine.  Please use the activities mentioned in this post to teach your children about your country and everything that makes it great. 

Here are some other activities you can do:

*Look up the story behind our national anthem and our flag.

*Watch a national sport on television or live.  Find three interesting facts about the state that each team comes from and find that state on a map.

*The U.S soccer team just qualified for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.  Follow the competition and look up all of the countries that the United States competes against.  

*Watch the Olympics with your kids.  Talk about, and do some research, on the different countries competing.

*Share our constitution with your kids and discuss its significance and how it makes our country different from other countries.

*Pick out a current event related to politics or international relations and discuss it with your kids. (Keep it age appropriate and don’t scare them.)

Sports at any level teach so many important lessons about life.  Use sports to teach your kids about their great country too.  I believe that God gifted us each with very unique talents.  We are blessed to live in a country that allows us the opportunity to maximize them.  What ever your child’s talents may be, give them the tools to succeed, so they can live the American Dream!

Got other activity ideas?  Share them with other parents by posting a comment.

You can now follow me on twitter and receive a reminder every week about my new post.  Next Monday’s post is about our culture’s desire to win at all cost.

Personalized and autographed copies of Gracie Goat’s Big Bike Race or Shawn Sheep The Soccer Star are now available for purchase through PayPal at www.erinmirabella.com.  Christmas is coming; keep them in mind as a gift for the little ones in your life.

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