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Fitness

5 Ways to Develop the Fighting Spirit in Youth Athletes

Get youth athletes headed in the right direction and keep despair at bay.

David Varnes

Written by David Varnes Last updated on Oct 25, 2022

Being a parent is tough. In addition to feeding, clothing, and taking care of the physical needs of a child, you are also responsible for developing their mental strength. In fact, developing mental strength and a fighting spirit is one of the most important things a parent can do.

Fighting spirit can overcome economic backgrounds, educational deficiencies, and even physical and mental limitations. But, how do we develop fighting spirit? Before looking at five great strategies to build fighting spirit in children, I’m going to give you an example of why it is important.

Identifying the Despair

In one of my first judo tournaments in Japan, I had the chance to observe the children’s divisions, which were organized by club rather than school teams.

One team in particular stood out. The players had beautiful technique. A throw executed by one of them was almost an assured ippon victory. But as I watched, I noticed a disturbing trend. If a match went longer than a minute or two, the players from this club routinely lost. It wasn’t a matter of conditioning. I knew the players were in good shape. It was a lack of fighting spirit.

“Fighting spirit is an essential strength we need to develop in our children, not just for their lives in sport, but for their lives in general.”

Despite cheering coaches and an initially aggressive attitude, if the player couldn’t win quickly, despair set in. You could almost read their minds. “Why is this guy still standing here? I’ve hit him with the best I have, and I haven’t won. Why can’t I win? I can’t win.”

From the instant that look came over a player’s face, I knew the match would change. More than once I leaned over to my friend and said, “This kid is going to lose. He’s done for.”

kids Judo, competition, spirit, determination

The rest of the match followed a predictable pattern. The once-confident player became extremely defensive, trying every trick in the book to delay, stall, and hang on rather than to win. When asked how I could predict so many losses on players who were at the time dominating their matches, I simply explained the players from that club lacked fighting spirit.

5 Ways to Build Fighting Spirit

Fighting spirit is a strength that means more than just the willingness to engage in adversarial combat. That’s bullying and belligerence. It’s more than perseverance, as mere perseverance can mean taking a beating without ever trying to succeed or improve.

Fighting spirit is an essential strength we need to develop in our children, not just for their lives in sport, but for their lives in general. Here are five tools you can use to build it.

1. Set High Expectations

Les Brown, a famous motivational speaker, repeatedly says in his speeches, “Most people fail in life not because they aim too high and miss, but because they aim too low and hit.”

Expect the most out of your children, and help them expect the most out of themselves. I’ve seen children who perform in school years above their grade level. I’ve seen kids who can lift weights adults deem impossible. All this merely because the child expects he or she can. Have high expectations for your kids, and even if they miss, they can end up at a higher level than if you keep your expectations low.

2. Let Them Fail Sometimes

Losing sucks, every adult knows that. Because of that, certain groups advocate encouraging self-esteem and the concept of “losing” has been removed from many areas of a child’s life. Soccer and baseball games no longer keep score, and some schools no longer grade tests. These challenges of little consequence are removed, all in the name of promoting children’s self-worth. The result of this is that when life does deliver challenges that do have consequences, the child’s mental muscles aren’t ready for the strain.

“For now, encourage children to pursue their dreams with all their heart.”

Let your kids get familiar with the strain needed for true success, and if they fail sometimes, so be it. Let them learn from loss and develop the skill set that comes with critical evaluation of performance. Let them learn how to come back from a loss and to know the self-esteem that comes from true achievement, not false puffery.

adolescent sports, coaching, childrens competition

3. Encourage the Dream

Currently, my son has a dream. When he gets older (maybe ten, maybe 100, he’s not sure), he wants to be a firefighter who also drives an excavator, while moonlighting as Batman, and becoming the strongest man in the world (watch out Hafthor Bjornson).

The realistic adult in me wants to say his dream is impossible. But, I also realize this sort of dreaming represents him setting a high goal for himself. Sure, the odds of him becoming the strongest man in the world are roughly one in seven billion. Sure, Batman exists only in comic books and on film. But, who knows what he could become?

Don’t worry about counting the cost now. There will be time enough for that later. For now, encourage children to pursue their dreams with all their heart.

4. Encourage a +1 Mentality

While my son may have dreams of being strong and I expect big things of him, I also know that handing him an Atlas stone and telling him to lift it now would be useless. On the other hand, challenging him to lift one more kilogram than last time or to try one more new word than before in his schoolwork lets him feel the challenge is within reach.

“Gains are gained through effort – hard effort.“

For whatever it is for your children, encourage them to be a tiny bit better than they were before. The accumulation of these constant small increases, regardless of the area of study, will lead to huge gains in the long term.

5. Recognize Effort, Not Results

Gains are gained through effort – hard effort. This is true whether we’re talking about the back squat, math, or how to cook a perfect steak. If your child tries with all he or she has, regardless of the result, give him or her a hug. Let your children know you are proud of their efforts.

soccer, youth sports, adolescent training

At the same time, if your child didn’t try, then note it. Let him or her know that you expect better next time. Without putting your child down, encourage him or to try harder next time. Encourage your children to analyze what went wrong and consider how they can prevent it from happening again.

Spirit Is Crucial

In a perfect world, fighting spirit might not be necessary. In the real world, fighting spirit is needed to be successful. Even if your goal is to make the world a utopia, you must have fighting spirit to shape the world to your will. Nobody stumbles their way into a perfect life without effort, regardless of the anecdotes you may read.

Encourage your children to develop their own fighting spirit, to grow their mental muscle. Hopefully, their strength and spirit will make them as successful as they could ever want.

Read more about youth athletes:

  • 3 Steps to Nip Youth Performance Anxiety in the Bud
  • Foundational Training for Youth Athletes
  • Biological Versus Chronological Age in Youth Sports
  • What’s New on Breaking Muscle Today

Photos courtesy of Shutterstock.

David Varnes

About David Varnes

David Varnes was born in 1978 in Ventura County, California. Growing up, there were a few constants in his life: a love of learning, playing sports, and being the "fat kid" in his class. That all changed in 1991 when his family moved to Camden, South Carolina. There, after getting run over by a car, he started his life long love of fitness and weightlifting. Using equipment best described as bare-bones, David rebuilt a shattered leg and body into a two-sport athlete, setting school records in the squat along the way. After high school, he graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point (where he met his wife), and served in the U.S. Army.

Figuring out that the Army and him were not compatible, David left the Army and spent a few years trying to find his passion. He worked at big-box gyms in the Albuquerque, New Mexico area while training with Greg Jackson, but quickly learned that A) the big box sales approach wasn't for him, and B) he wasn't going to ever be a UFC champion, having sacrificed too many brain cells to high school football, and was now glass-jawed. Leaving New Mexico, David eventually moved to Japan.

For the past five years, David has lived in Japan as an English teacher and private trainer, helping athletes and normal people make the most of themselves. He and his wife opened their own school, the International Academy of Matsumoto, in 2010, with the a full-day children's school and family fitness facility in the works, with the goals of helping people reach their potential. His greatest pride comes from his wife Karen and his son Christopher.

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