I want to share with you our experience tonight with the end of summer league swim team banquet, because I think it will help coaches and team moms understand why it's not very nice to REWARD the team for HARD WORK and a great season with stuff that you know or should know that some members medically can't eat.
In this day and age there are substitutes available for nearly everything that taste good and are safe, and it is not necessary to change team traditions to avoid devaluing some of your team members. Though, if you'd like to choose non-food rewards, more power to you.
We have made some progress with this, as you'll see below, but we have a ways to go.
My son is a true celiac; my daughter is a gluten intolerant -- if she has even trace amounts of gluten, she will break out and we know from early on, when she used to think she could cheat on the diet, that any cheating results in a loss of athletic performance. Basically you cannot get your best possible times if you are causing general inflammation in your body. Your food intolerant athletes are being GOOD team members when they don't eat the offending foods. I think it's important to say that. They have more work to do to perform for their teams than they would without the food sensitivity. My son would be, you know, anemic and/or dead without the gluten free diet so it goes without saying, he wouldn't be anchoring the A relay much if he ate gluten.
I'm going to go ahead and post so I don't lose what I've written and continue this story in a few minutes, because I have a parenting thing to attend to ...
In this day and age there are substitutes available for nearly everything that taste good and are safe, and it is not necessary to change team traditions to avoid devaluing some of your team members. Though, if you'd like to choose non-food rewards, more power to you.
We have made some progress with this, as you'll see below, but we have a ways to go.
My son is a true celiac; my daughter is a gluten intolerant -- if she has even trace amounts of gluten, she will break out and we know from early on, when she used to think she could cheat on the diet, that any cheating results in a loss of athletic performance. Basically you cannot get your best possible times if you are causing general inflammation in your body. Your food intolerant athletes are being GOOD team members when they don't eat the offending foods. I think it's important to say that. They have more work to do to perform for their teams than they would without the food sensitivity. My son would be, you know, anemic and/or dead without the gluten free diet so it goes without saying, he wouldn't be anchoring the A relay much if he ate gluten.
I'm going to go ahead and post so I don't lose what I've written and continue this story in a few minutes, because I have a parenting thing to attend to ...