gracyomalley
Proud Parent
- Aug 5, 2013
- 944
- 1,347
When my DD was that age she went through a lot of anxiety. We never pinned it down to one particular trigger - she was processing our divorce (which happened when she was 4, but the reality of her different life, esp. her relationship with her dad, seemed to be hitting), in retrospect a bit stressed by moving from old L5 to L7 in 6 months (NOT aware at the time and seemed super happy), a coaching conflict at her gym that led her 2 favorite coaches to part ways and her to have to "choose" which to train with (of course, I made that choice for her, but she took a bunch of it on), her grandmother had some health problems, etc. None of this seemed like a clear trigger, and her life has always had some ups and downs, older relatives are all around so death is "normal", etc.
She was completely unable to express what was making her anxious or what she was anxious about - but it came out in some very OCD behavior at home...relating to pets, rituals, etc. Very much interfered with her life and ours!
My point is it may have NOTHING to do with gym itself- but for my kid counseling was extremely helpful both short term and now years later, long term. She continues to be a high strung, intensely emotional kid, and takes things too seriously/personally, etc. Her level of anxiety can still escalate in certain situations (and scary skills at gym, or social interactions are both sometimes difficult), but her ability to process her anxiety is actually pretty impressive for her age and she still has a relationship with that counselor which was helpful last year when she was trying to decide if she'd return to gym - and why. I continue to be grateful that I didn't just "wait for things to improve" - as I'm sure they would have but then she wouldn't have gained the skills she has to deal with her anxiety/feelings rather than have me "fix it for her".
I'd strongly recommend having her see a child/family counselor (ours also happens to do sports counseling and was a gymnast, but that was just luck) if things don't quickly resolve - how quickly depends upon the kid, however, a few weeks into a new gym and a 9 year old "should" be fine with a parent dropping off and picking up most of the time...good luck!
She was completely unable to express what was making her anxious or what she was anxious about - but it came out in some very OCD behavior at home...relating to pets, rituals, etc. Very much interfered with her life and ours!
My point is it may have NOTHING to do with gym itself- but for my kid counseling was extremely helpful both short term and now years later, long term. She continues to be a high strung, intensely emotional kid, and takes things too seriously/personally, etc. Her level of anxiety can still escalate in certain situations (and scary skills at gym, or social interactions are both sometimes difficult), but her ability to process her anxiety is actually pretty impressive for her age and she still has a relationship with that counselor which was helpful last year when she was trying to decide if she'd return to gym - and why. I continue to be grateful that I didn't just "wait for things to improve" - as I'm sure they would have but then she wouldn't have gained the skills she has to deal with her anxiety/feelings rather than have me "fix it for her".
I'd strongly recommend having her see a child/family counselor (ours also happens to do sports counseling and was a gymnast, but that was just luck) if things don't quickly resolve - how quickly depends upon the kid, however, a few weeks into a new gym and a 9 year old "should" be fine with a parent dropping off and picking up most of the time...good luck!