well, the decision is ultimately up to you and how you feel about this or how dedicated you are.
In soccer we have really really tough workouts. We do really hard weight regimens, tires, running. The coach puts everything into competition, and so all groups need you to win. If you don't perform it pisses them off. [/b]
I'd say talk to the coach. Ask him to lower the workout a bit or make it less competitive and tell him how it makes you feel. Tell him how it makes you want to quit soccer. Don't push yourself to. If you're tired, then sit down and come back in 5 minutes. There isn't really much you can do with this except talking with him or sucking it up, or just not doing it(but that wouldn't really be fair for everyone else)
The worst part of this is my irregular, stresed out heartbeat throughout the day. When I know its going to be a hard day, every time that I think of it during the day, my heartbeat speeds up and goes into nervous mode. I might think about it maybe 30-45 on or off minutes a day. It feels really unhealthy. It adds up to a lot of time. A lot of unnatural beating. Beating that isn't relaxed.[/b]
whenever i thought of swimming i always got pumped up and my heart would race to. So the only advice i can give you is to stop thinking about it. This unnnatural beating sounds weird though. Talk to someone about it. either your mom, coach, or doctor.
Now I'm debating what I should do. I can quit, but I want to put varsity soccer on my resume, I'm debating how important that is. There is some peer pressure to not bail out on soccer too, I don't think it would affect me too badly. [/b]
i won't lie. varsity sports look good on college applications, but you know you can always do another sport. Try something new, see if you're good at that or pick a sport less demanding. It sounds like this isn't your first year playing varsity soccer so the year you did play would still show up on your resume. If people give you crap about quitting, just tell them that you wanted to try something new
If you're up to do the hard workouts, then go for it, but if this irregular hardbeat becomes too much of a problem or too bothersome, then don't do it. Health risks are not worth having sports on your resume.
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