by Tara Pringle Jefferson
My son entered the world weighing a hefty eight pounds, nine ounces. Even though babies traditionally lose weight after they’re born, by the time we went to the pediatrician a week later, he was already well over nine pounds. And he just kept going. At his two month visit he was 12 pounds, at three months he was sixteen pounds. By the time he was six months old, he was well into size four diapers and size 18 month clothes. At eight months now he weighs about two pounds less than his two-year-old sister. He’s consistently at the 97th percentile mark, and recently hit the 100th percentile in height. (At five feet tall, I was especially proud of that.)
To put it mildly, he’s a big boy.
Because he’s so hefty he gets mistaken for an older baby. “He isn’t walking yet?” people ask.
“He’s only seven months,” I say, shifting him to the other hip.
“Oh,” they say. “Well, you’ve got a little football player on your hands there!” or “He’s going to play sports for sure.”
And it’s not just folks who see him in the grocery store. Comes from family members as well, who are already envisioning being on the 50-yard line during my son’s game-winning Super Bowl drive.
For some reason, this irks me. No, I think to myself, he’s not going to play sports. He’s just going to be a really burly surgeon, with extra-large scrubs.
I come from a long line of people who seem to value boys who play sports more than boys who excel academically. I’m a big nerd myself, missing the athletic gene, unable to run around the bases without getting winded or injuring myself somehow. I was always the smartest girl in the class, but always the one to cower in the back during gym class.
It bothers me when people (especially black folks) put such an emphasis on how well their sons can dribble a basketball but don’t know if their kid is reading at grade level. I don’t think there’s all gifted athletes are dummies, not at all. But I choose to focus on my son’s (and daughter’s) academic prowess first, before worrying about whether they can make a free throw.
BMWK readers, what do you think? Do you think our boys are steered into being good athletes rather than good students? Speak your piece.
Tara Pringle Jefferson is a freelance writer from Ohio, where she lives with her husband and two kids. Visit her blog, TheYoungMommyLife.com, for daily musings about the issues young moms face.
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