Soccer Season is Here. Are You Ready, Snacktivists?
If you’re fed up with soccer snacks (or baseball, swimming , or basketball snacks), if you’re done with frosted cupcakes, donuts, cookies, chips, and sugary drinks on the sidelines after games, if you’re ready to make a change on your child’s team, now is the time to act!
Talk to your child’s coach–ideally before the first or second practice but definitely before the first game. Let him or her know about your concerns and ideas. If the coach is open to a healthier snack policy, you’ll want to spread the word and organize right away (or consider eliminating the snack completely. Read “What if Soccer Snacks Just Went Away?“)
Here’s an example of the kind of email you can send. Feel free to cut, paste, edit, and make this your own.
Hi Coach ____,
I wanted to introduce myself. I’m _____’s mom, and we’re all excited about the upcoming season!
I’m writing because I’d like to discuss
the topic of team snacks with you. I’m concerned about the junk food
I’ve been seeing on the sidelines of kids’ sports, and I’m wondering if
you would be open to a fruit-and-water snack policy for our team this
season (remember the orange slices we ate on the sidelines when we were
kids?). Children don’t need Oreos, cupcakes, Doritos, and sugary punch
on Saturday mornings–or in the evening, especially if families are
having dinner after the game. One of the reasons we have our kids in
sports is to encourage physical activity and good health, and these
kinds of snacks derail that goal. I’ve discussed this with other
parents on the sidelines, and it seems like many of them would love to
see an end to the junk food too.
If you’d like, I can draft an email to parents on the team about
the fruit-and-water snack policy. I’m also happy to organize the snack
schedule for you. Please let me know your thoughts.Thank you!
Here are some more tools to help you:
Sample Team Letter: Explaining the fruit-and-water policy and providing examples of kinds of fruit to bring.
FAQ: In case you’re met with questions.
Slideshow: Photos
I took on the soccer fields of snacks (from Krispy Kremes to bananas)
set to music, plus powerful statistics that will hopefully get coaches
and parents aware and on board.
I’m also here to help you in any way I can. So feel free to stop by my Facebook page and leave me a message–or post a success story!
Make THIS the season you push for real change. Good luck!
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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
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March 18, 2013 at 1:46 pm
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Sally — I’m wearing my Snacktivist badge and am ready to get to work on the soccer and t-ball snacks! I’m thinking of contacting the organizations involved and ask them to provide info on healthy snacks to all the coaches. I’ll let you know what kind of response I get.
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March 24, 2013 at 4:25 pm
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Biggest kitchen cleaning challenge? The range hood & backsplash!
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April 21, 2013 at 5:04 pm
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Score one for the food-obsessed mom!! I have two out of three spring sports teams agreeing to NO snacks after baseball games! The third decided to just do a few games over the season (kindergarten softball team), but it’s better than every night! I tried to do “healthy snacks” last year, but that just didn’t work (my idea of healthy is way different than some other families’). This year I asked all the coaches to just let kids bring their own snack, that way WE can decide for our own families what is a good snack after a baseball game.