The lesson here is a good one, but it rang false with me. My kids were in sports and in lots of other activities, swimming among them. With such a dedicated swimmer, it is implausible that someone wasn't at the meet with this 9 year old. The someone who has to get up and make sure she makes the 6:00am practices wouldn't miss a meet for anything. With such a dedicated athlete, especially one who excels most especially at swimming over academics, if her parents couldn't be there at least one of her GPs would have been there at the meet to support her. If her parents had guests, those guests probably would have been there for at least one race, too. Most likely, her parents would have been there as timers or would have been providing snacks for the team, working in the concession stand, or providing supervision for the younger swimmers. I spent many a Saturday in a chlorine thick environment cheering my swimmers on or driving for hours and then sitting in a gym waiting for my swimmer's turn on the block.
So, yeah, valuable concept to learn and emulate, but it was a totally contrived story.
This reminded me of an incident that happened about 14 years ago. My friend was visiting me and my children at my P's house. The kids were all under the age of 10 at the time. The door to the shed feel on my friend's DS's head. He began to cry. I was astounded that instead of comforting him, my friend and her H started to criticize him. DF said he was such a baby because he cried over everything. When I was able to pick my jaw off the ground, I told her I would cry, too, if a shed door fell on my head. A strange thing happened, all of a sudden they had permission to have empathy for their DS. They comforted him and were a lot nicer to him after that and a lot less judgmental. I didn't ask, but I wondered who had criticized their DS in such a way. That person must have been someone whose opinion they feared or maybe it was someone whose approval they wanted desperately. It made me sad they would throw their DS under the bus for this person and sad, too, that my opinion would have such an impact. Obviously, they didn't have a lot of trust in their own judgment.