We dealt with something similar to this a couple years ago. DD wanted to be in team but did not want to actually compete. She would break down in tears over it, even go into practice crying. She would get stomach aches because her anxiety level was so high. I was ready to pull her out but she was insistent that she did not want to quit, she wanted to stay on team, just not compete, but she could not tell us why. She has a hard time pinpointing and communicating her feelings.
I finally figured it out after talking to another mother whose daughter was telling her what was going on in the gym. There was a coach in the gym working with a different level telling her girls that if they didn’t get their skills, they would not compete. Even though it wasn’t her coach, she thought that still applied to her. She was working on a new skill at the time, but it was not a requirement for her level, but only being 7, she didn’t know that, or her coach didn’t think to tell her that. So she is working on a new skill that she doesn’t have yet, but she thinks she needs it to compete and she was consistently hearing another coach tell her girls that they can’t compete if they don’t get the skills they are working on. Additionally at home we were telling her that she had to compete this year because we already made the financial commitment but she is hearing at the gym that she can’t compete. I fully understand now that at 7 it had to be very confusing and upsetting, especially for a child that internalizes things.
DD does not respond well to negative motivation. She just shuts down and can’t function well. Once I learned what was going on, I sat down with the head coach to discuss the situation. She was very understanding and they made some adjustments in the gym so that other coaches would be more mindful of her when both levels would work close together. They also explained to my DD the exact requirements for her level, and that what she was working on was uptraining and that she had all the necessary skills to compete. It immediately calmed her fears and she was fine to compete and no longer had tears at practice.
All that to say that it may be more than a lack of passion going on with your daughter. It took us a few months to figure it out. When they are young sometimes it’s hard for them to pinpoint what makes them feel the way they do. I would talk to her coaches and see if maybe they could help you determine what is going on. Maybe see if other parents are dealing with something similar. A fear of a skill could also be what is upsetting her. Maybe she just needs extra encouragement and patience to know that she has the time and space she needs to slowly work through those fears. Maybe she is feeling pushed into doing things she is not ready for. But it sounds like something else is going on other than just lack of passion.