Hi A.
I called mine competitive. I think it started before he was born. He not only wanted to do his best but often could do better than most, and would give 200% to everything he was doing. Our older son came home from K reading. You know pointing to words, and saying them. Our competitive son listened watched and learned. By the time he started prek, he could read everything in sight. Now you might think that is not bad, but oldest was 4 when the competitive one was born. We don't know when he started reading, just was reading the newspaper at the start of prek. I didn't force him or praise him because I didn't even know. Crib-- forget it, he climbed out to be like big brother and sleep in the big bed, at 6 months. Walked at 7months. Played every position at ball field. Yup, he played first base, caught the ball at 3rd base and got back to first to get kids out. All the time. We didn't praise this because although he could do it it was wrong. You get the idea. He played soccer with a head injury, one when he couldn't really see the other end of the field. He played goalie. Declared totally incapacitated for 7 months, but when released from MD care to play, played again and even went to Europe to play. Many games I sat with my hands over my face and twins in the stroller because although I had to be there, I could no longer watch.
There was nothing I could do. He gave 200% to everything. Today he is a lawyer for the US government stationed on foreign soil, he & his lovely wife became parents this summer, and he is a wonderful adult. He wanted to be best and he would be by the day's end at everything he tried. When it becomes a problem is when they can't. Age never made a difference, but ability did. He was good at fine line definitions, so teachers said he argued, I corrected saying we call it debating. What a difference it made in teachers!!! Using those fine line definitions he could often talk the teacher into why he wrote the answer he did, and he would be correct. They should have used angry not mad is always my simple example. By High School they just signed passes to the library except for test day. He aced everything. Yup, I have dealt with the competitive child and call it great. He could and would do anything that was set before him. If another kid could do it, he could do it better, faster, wiser.
Eventually it was AOK, because he just did those things that fit into his competitive nature. For instance the second foreign language was tough so dropped German. He had a scholarship so had to pole vault one semester. He did, in spite of the fact that he had broken his lower back in a car accident earlier that summer and no one had found it. Took about 9 months before the spine locked while he was a page in DC. The senator didn't want to be responsible so took him to spine specialist, who found the break. He gave 300% those 9 months, and according to him he would do it again.
Enjoy your competitive daughter. Encourage her, and let her choose her own activities. Teachers told me to ease up, I had not done this. It sounds like you are not doing it, so ease up on yourself and let her be who God made her to be. Listen and let her do what she wants. If you think she is not doing right for herself don't take her back.
Since I am old enough to be your mom, talk to her, listen she probably has great stories to tell too.
God bless you and all you do
K. SAHM married 38 years with grown kids 37,32 and the twins are 18 and away at college. Yup I am an empty nest, grandma