luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,362
Y'all are a bunch of fuddy duddies!!!
Yes, I wear buttons with pictures of my kids to their sporting events. I also wear light up dread locks in the team colors, ring cowbells (that are also in team colors), have light up team colored spirit sticks, shake pom poms, and wear shirts that say "Child's Name's Mom." Especially on my daughter's cheer team. We all do it. It's highly encouraged by the coaches so we run with it. We have a great time and it pumps the kids up. Ain't nothing wrong with that! I do not think of myself as too cool to participate in a little team spirit.
My kids think it's hilarious! So do their friends. It's all in good fun. My children have fabulous personalities and senses of humor. They cheer just as loudly for each other as I do for each of them. I LOVE that!
So go ahead and think youself superior while you give the polite golf clap and praise for nothing in particluar. I'll keep turning cartwheels with my spirit sticks lit.
ETA: on my daughter's cheer team (not a sideline team, a traveling, National competition team) the parents who don't wear the light up dreads, team shirts, ring cowbells, ect are the ones that stand out. So, no, this is not attention seeking behavior, it's just team spirit and it works. It totally pumps them up! They win every competition they go to. :0)

The set of parents I have always sat with are the loudest and cheering the most. We always had our "spirit cans" which consisted of drink cans with rocks inside and the tops taped up, spray painted in team colors--and Lordy, can we make those things rattle.
When ds played ball, if a homerun was hit, the entire stands stood up yelling "WHOOP, there it is!", loud enough to shake the town.
We were quite obnoxious without the t-shirts and the pins!
And as both sons attended and dd will attend an agriculture school, you can bet the cowbells are plentiful.
But, I get what you are saying, it does help the team if the crowd is cheering and gets the team up and ready to play, cheer, whatever.