The sport, MOTOCROSS, is best-known as dangerous and as the sport parents don’t let their kids do. Here is the truth.
In this generation kids don’t have the same morals and discipline as the older generations had, which are becoming a problem. It’s harder to teach them, harder to be respected as an older person. The children of today need something to get them out of the mix. That mix where alcohol and drugs are involved.
Parents will always spend $10 000 a month on their children in the long run. Don’t let it be spent in a rehabilitation center, rather let it be on bikes. Never thought of it in that way, have you?
See, as your child gets to high school, they change, relationships becomes a priority, so does the need to fit in. To fit in they do whatever it takes, it might be to bully another child or to down a beer, or smoke some weed. Now whether you know it or not, your child does thing behind your back you don’t know of, every single one. It can rather be stealing some petrol out of your car just to ride his bike a bit, than stealing your money to buy drugs.
Where normal children go to parties every Friday night, a motocross child rather stays home prepping his bike, knowing he’s riding tomorrow. When a normal child goes to the mall on a Saturday, a motocross child is at the track, out of trouble.
Yes it’s an expensive sport, it hurts your bank account and forces you to make sacrifices for your child, but I guarantee you, you spend more time with your child than 90% of parents out there do. When you let your child ride that dirt bike of his, his priorities change, instead of saving money for that new PlayStation game, he saves money for that new helmet he wants, or new pair of boots.
Dirt bikes aren’t dangerous. Every single sport has its injuries. You can break your neck with rugby, or get a blue eye from hockey. These other sports are actually more dangerous that Motocross as you wear NO PROTECTION.
Speaking to every moto-parent out there, no other words than ‘This was the best thing that could’ve happened in my child’s life’, comes out of their mouths.
It’s better to see your child happy, washing his bikes, than seeing your child happy for the wrong reasons…
That's what happy children looks like!
Brings families together.
Let's get MOTO-ing!