Hot on HuffPost Parents:
Lisa Belkin: The Tornado In Oklahoma Is This Parent's Living Nightmare
Jenn Horton: Every Mom Deserves Your Nod
Can't Ride a Bike at 8 - How Bad?
Filed under: Gear Guides: Big Kids
"Hi Sabrina," the email began. (Hi! Thanks for writing!) "My 8 year old son has not learned how to ride a bike yet. Is this really bad? I feel guilty that at this age he doesn't know how to ride."
Low bike-skills guilt -- I get it. As moms we are pros at feeling guilty over issues like this. Her note goes on:
"He gets frustrated very easily, and I tried on various occasions last summer to teach him only to have him 'give up' within the first 10 minutes. I didn't want to push him so I just let it go."
The letter mentioned a few other important points: 1) The same issue had arisen when Mom bought her son a skateboard (frustration followed by quitting), and 2) her son is otherwise healthy and active, he enjoys a few sports and loves playing outside.
"Am I worrying over nothing?" she asks at the end. To find out, I called my friend and Mommy Advisor Rosanne Tobey, director of Calm and Sense Therapy, a counseling service, for her take on the situation.
"My first question is, 'How frustrated is this child getting?," Tobey says. "This mother is right in her instincts to want to teach her child and in wanting to try pushing him a little further. And her instinct that they're quitting too soon might be correct also..."
"It's not so terrible that he can't ride a bike, especially since he is healthy and athletic, but I am more concerned about the patterns getting set up about him getting frustrated and quitting. Perhaps many things come easily to him and when they don't, he doesn't know what to do."
Hmm, I'm cueing up a visual of a child I know giving the ol' piano keys a gentle-yet-sad forehead-banging. So how can a mom encourage a child who is frustrated and feels like giving up? Tobey has ideas:
Break tasks into tiny pieces. For example? "Get him to sit on the bike and put his feet on the pedals while you hold the handlebars. Just stay with that for a while so he gets used to the feeling. Let him play with the seat height and the kickstand." In other words, get him used to the bike as a friendly presence, slowly.
Set your child up for success. "Is the bike too big or too small? Are the wheels inflated enough?" Once the basics are in order, you can approach the psyche side of learning:
Talk about mistakes as a good thing. "This is hard, but use this as an opportunity to teach them what the learning process is like, and how making mistakes is an inherent part of learning. How getting it wrong is important in order to know how to do it right. They are not failing, they are at the very beginning stages of succeeding."
Okay I love that bit about starting to succeed, but what about when a child simply says: "I quit and I won't do this anymore?!"
Know when to push. "You have to know when to push ... and when to stop, and that can be really hard to figure out. If your child is crying or tantrum-ing, obviously they can't give this their best right now. If it's at that point, you say 'Let's stop and try another time.' But the message you're giving is that you're taking a break, which is different than quitting."
Catch frustration early. "Even better is if you can intervene when you first start seeing the child getting frustrated. Try talking in an encouraging way, and telling them you know they can get better. Talk about how much they've learned so far."
Get help. "It can be so intense for parents to teach their own children. If there is someone else that can help out, sometimes that takes a lot of pressure off. It's hard feeling alone -- it's okay to ask someone to step in and help you."
And then you get to be the one to show up once he's made some progress, and cheer like crazy.
Good luck!
If you've ever had a less-than-perfect parenting moment that has left you wondering, "How bad?" Send it to Sabrina at PrincessLPink9@aol.com. She'll try to answer as many as she can.
Sabrina Weill is the founder of the pink and princess-y gift site: PrincessLovesPink. Many of the Mommy Advisors in this column are the writer's personal or professional friends.
Related: Sippy Cup Full of Soda - How Bad?











ReaderComments (Page 4 of 5)
2-27-2010 @ 11:44PM
ashle said...im 20 and can only ride in circles i told my grandmother im not teaching my kids how to ride. some one else will have to.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 11:34AM
Amy said...American....oh so let's blame the PARENT because a kid can't read....my son is 11 and struggles majorly with reading and spelling...why? Because he has a SEVERE LEARNING DISABILITY!!!! Is that MY fault????? yeah I didn't THINK so. Get your head out of your ass. And to pam....ok so because the kid can't ride a bike, he MUST be autistic? Get real.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 11:39AM
lorenrose1013 said...I didn't learn to ride a bike until the summer before I turned 10. Even then i used training wheels until the end of summer. My biggest fear was falling off because my dog chewed all my helmets and kneepads. But my mom moved the training wheels up a little each day before I woke up and then i was riding without them touching the ground. SO finally she just took them off.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 11:42AM
Elaine1975 said...My mom bought me my first bike when I was 11 years old. I was so excited!! But after falling time after time after time ... it really did get discouraging. My mom pretty much gave up on me after about a week ...
I'd take the bike to a big (safe) parking lot and keep trying to ride, but it just didn't happen.
Then one day I was watching a t.v. show with a celebrity that I really admired - he was talking about "not giving up" when you wanted something in your life. So I took the bike out to the parking, lot, took a deep breath ... and RODE to the other side of the parking lot (where I finally fell off). But the thing is - after that I COULD ride a bike. I can't explain how or why, but suddenly after almost a year of trying I FOUND my balance.
Some of us are late-bloomers. Elaine
Reply
2-28-2010 @ 1:33AM
Kim said...Are you kidding me? There are bigger issues to worry about. My son is 10 now and almost had the hang of bike riding when we moved from a rural setting to a more urban one about 5 years ago, after that all attempts to teach him were futile to say the least. My sons response when questioned about his lack of skill or when prompted especially by his Grandparents, Aunts & Uncles to learn is... "It's not like it's going to get me into college." Let's try and keep things in perspective, please. Who wants it more? The kid or the mom? Is there a future Tour De France winner here due to genetics or a simple case of momma needs to keep up with the Jones?
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 11:48AM
lyndachristelle said...I'm not sure if my two boys, ages 15 and 16, can ride a bike or not but I tell you this, put a basketball in their hands and prepare to be amazed!
There are much more important things to worry about...
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 11:53AM
mike said...I bought my son a Razor eletric scooter. He learned how to balance on it and then he could ride a bicycle without a problem.
Reply
4-11-2010 @ 10:29AM
justlogic said...This is so simple and it works,no training wheels needed. Make sure his bike is the right size for him. Then just take the pedals off the bike and your child will push the bike around with his feet learning to balance naturally on his own and will begin lifting his feet and gliding as his skills improve, once this is accomplished put the wheels back on. This does work, my dad taught us this way and I have three kids and we did this with all of them.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:02PM
Gary said...My son is 26 and still playing in sand boxes.....Dumb Shit.
Reply
3-08-2010 @ 11:11PM
Bella said...Im14 now but when i was 8 my dad and brother tried to teach me how to ride a bike. i only did it with training wheels.one day my dad told me he got rid of the training wheels and i was so scared to ride a bike. I wouldnt ever even touch it! My dad went to Iraq one summer and i just sat on the bike. I said to myself "Lets try it without peddling,just gliding with my feet hanging out the sides." I had so much fun! For 2 months i just glided down a small hill and when i needed to stop I used the hand brakes. After a while,when i was 11 i got the hang of it and started to get balancing easier. Now i mostly know how to ride a bike but tryin' to start to stand up! Its difficult. BUT Dont give up!
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:35PM
BUTTON said...KIDS ARE KIDS. THEY SHOULD NOT BE PUSHED JUST BECAUSE OTHERS CAN BALANCE AND WALK/CHEW GUM AT ONE TIME. TEACH INSTEAD THE DANGERS OF DRUGS, DRINKING, SEX, DISEASE. THIS WILL BE MORE PRODUCTIVE UNTIL THEY FIND THEIR OWN INTERESTS. MY SON ONLY LIVED UNTIL 19 BECAUSE HE DRANK AND DROVE. ALL THE BIKE RIDING NEVER HELPED HIM LEARN THE DANGERS OF BEING IN A CAR AND HOW TO SAY, "NO!" QUIT WORRYING AND ENJOY YOUR SON. HE'S A MAGNIFICANT CREATION OF GOD!! REMEMBER JESUS NEVER RODE A BIKE EITHER!!!!
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 1:07PM
susan said...Leave the kid alone- just because he does not ride a bike does not mean he could be autistic. Now a days, parents are quick to test their kids for everything and anything and put them on some kind of drug. The schools push it too. The school psychologists needs kids to see in order for their position to be retained. They insist this kid and that kid have ADD and should be on medication; it goes on and on.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:48PM
Darrell Elmore said...If he decides he wants to ride, unless he has a balance or cognitive problem, he will learn. I learned at 6 when my dad put me on a full size 26" boys bike and pushed me down the road and telling me to pedal. I crashed into a picket fence and rose bush. He pushed me again and I did pedal - and found that there is stability with speed!
I learned because I wanted to ride a bike - it gave me mobility - and I wanted my Dad to be proud too. If he is not really interested, let him find what does interest him. Much depends also on where you live, where he can go and whether you drive him everywhere now anyway.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:45PM
MAlleNrOhSLVR said...I'm 21 and I can't ride a bike, I did fine w/training wheels but when they came off and I did "learn" I promptly crashed face first into a fence and split my chin wide open. . . I don't see not being able to ride a bike a terribly huge disadvantage to your son. . . I never bother to pick up and dust off after I crashed into the fence but I also live out in the country, the nearest town from me is 13 miles away so I have no practical need for a bike or the skills to ride one. . .
on the other hand, I can ride a skateboard, roller blades, I used to snowboard, I know how to ice skate, I play volleyball and swim like a fish, I can drive a manual transmission car, I taught myself to sew, make jewelry, cook, I know how to build my own stretcher bars for my canvases, and panel mounts for my prints, I taught myself to quilt and how to make paper too, I can take apart, repair, and put a pocket watch back together, among other skills that I taught myself just out of sheer curiosity. . . I don't think I'm exactly hurting for not being able to ride a bike nor do I think this sets me back developmentally either
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:44PM
betty said...No need to be a "worry wart" BUT this answer seems to ignore the possibility that there "could" be a problem.
While a lot of kids do have more problems learning to ride a bike... sometimes just don't have a decent bike... could be they are "scared" of falling and that holds them back... or a balance problem...
BALANCE PROBLEM?
well it's worth a simple look.. I wouldn't rush the child to a dr...BUT when he has his next checkup...mention it...
Think.... Does he seem a little clumsey anyway? Does he trip a little more than other kids? Can he stand on one foot a balance for 10 seconds... etc... Can he "SKIP"?? Can he jump rope?
Can he stand on and balance a bit on his tip toes..? Walk on his tip toes? for more than just a split sec or two??
If you answer NO he can't to most of these questions, the child might actually have some type of neurological thing going on...
It's not a big deal to most people.. but I know a lady who's child is perfectly normal in EVERY WAY...smart..pretty little thing... but she can't skip... she can't jump rope... can't balance on one foot but for just a sec or she'd fall... SO FOR THIS...THE MOM WAS ABLE TO GET HER DECLARED "DISABLED" AND GETS ABOUT $600 A MONTH... FROM SS. seems like crap to me... that Money will never make that child be able to jump rope... just extra $ for mom...
BUT it's worth checking out... Also, there are something like 40 different types of muscular distrophy. Many slowly start in childhood... as certain muscle weaknesses... (normally ignored by most) ya just never know, so it's worth knowing and keeping in the back of your mind..in case you see an increase, or new symptoms
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:45PM
colleen said...What happened to the bike riding process here? Was he riding a bike with training wheels at 4 and 5 years old?
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:46PM
HALEY09 said...I'm 19 and I cant ride a bike. I am still tryin to learn but I just dont think I can do it. I do not have balance problems. I took gymnastics and still do fine on balance beams and such. Every one around me pushes me to learn even still, but I'm not interested. Could it be the child doesn't want to learn but feels he has to?
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:50PM
KatieCouric'sNemesis said...Hello??? Put training wheels on the bloody thing! He'll let them go when he doesn't need them anymore--at whatever age that is.
At 8 learning to deal with frustration shouldn't entail forcing the kid to go on...it's okay not to excel at EVERYTHING you do. Knowing when to quit is ALSO a good life skill.
Why do these "AOL columnist know it alls" give parents such treacle-like advice? There is no book of instructions that comes with a child telling how to raise him. Furthermore, gaining skills is not a "connect the dot" exercise. There is variation within the normal limits.
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 12:59PM
Donna said...When teaching my son, someone told me to lower the bike seat so that his feet could touch the ground. This was a real helful tip, if he felt that he was going to fall, he could just put his feet on the ground. Hope this helps! As a Mom we never quit worrying, my son is now 17 and the worrying hasn't stopped!
Reply
2-27-2010 @ 1:05PM
Vickie said...I have 3 boys. 18, 9 & 5. 18 yo is an Honor student, plays Varsity basketball and was just accepted to the college of his choice. My 9 & 5 YO have Aspergers Syndrome and although my 5 yo hasnt tried yet my 9 year old can't ride a bike. His training wheels started to bend so now we're going to try riding in the grass with plenty of safety gear! He also can't tie his shoes. Children on the Autism Spectrum have poor balance/coordination skills. He can't tie his shoes bc of delayed fine motor skills. I was 9 when I learn. I really wouldn't worry too much about it but I would definately talk to his Dr. about having him tested. It can't hurt, only help. And remember: riding a bike isn't going to help him get a college degree! Good Luck!! :)
Reply