Yes, it's their sport. But part of our job as parents is to help our children learn to make decisions with big impacts from a more mature viewpoint. Otherwise every 8 year old would quit over the damned mill circle or kip. I would never let my kids just say "I want to quit" without getting into a full conversation about why and what their plan was. It's easy to say "it's their sport, let them do what they want" but that negates our responsibility to assist them with making informed decisions about their lives. A 10 or even a 13 year old doesn't see beyond today or next week very well.
You are taking my quote and not applying context.
Here is the quote I was responding to and mine.
13 and 14 scare me. DD just lost 3 close friends to retirement, a 4th is threatening to retire as well. DD is only 10 but watching them drop is very unsettling. I am torn between letting her grow wings and trying new things or just staying put.
They were young kids who moved on......
It's their. It's really their decision to make.
It was about 13 and 14 yr olds not 8 yr olds.
Next who said just letting them quit on a whim, with no thought or conversation? Ummm not me.
13 and 14 yr olds in any sport a while, probably know when they are done. That is not retiring as if "its over" That are teens learning about themselves, moving on and a whole host of other things.
My kid decides on a nice spring afternoon she wants to "quit" because she needs to go to practice. Yeah no.
My kid dealing with the stress of injuries, huge life changes like moving, on top of new skills and fear. No I wouldn't be "forcing" them to stay.
An 8 yr old who hasn't given something a fair chance vs a 13 or 14 yr old doing a sport for a while. Completely different beasts.
When I see older kids at our gym leaving the sport. We miss them and we see it for what it is kids moving on to do other things. Its not a tragedy, its life.
When I see older kids at out gym leaving the sport. Its not about what their parents are "letting" them do. They are well thought out kids moving on.
When my kid decides she is done, we will talk, make sure she is at peace with her decision and be done.
ETA when a kid leaves our gym we don't approach it as watching them drop. We approach at as a celebration of what's to come for them, be it diving, lacrosse, soccer, dance, track or whatever other road they have chosen.