Fear of the unknown: Locked-down
athletes face mental health challenge
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[April 08, 2020]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - When Olympic
swimming champion Kyle Chalmers completed what he knew would be his
final training session before the coronavirus shutdown, his
overwhelming feelings were of sadness and the fear of what was to
come.
Fear does not come easily to the strapping 21-year-old Australian,
who has endured two heart operations since winning the 100 metres
freestyle title in Rio and raises crocodiles and pythons for a
hobby.
While it took some "processing" to digest the fact that his dream of
defending his Olympic title in Tokyo had been shifted back 12
months, it was the prospect of not setting foot in a swimming pool
for half a year that really had him rattled.
"That was my hugest fear, not being able to do what I love which is
swimming, and if I couldn't do that for six months, I was getting
pretty edgy about it," Chalmers told Reuters by phone from South
Australia.
"I love training and I love exercising. I think I love training more
than I love racing."
Chalmers is one of thousands of athletes whose dreams have been put
on hold following the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics, while
thousands more around the world are in lockdown with their sporting
careers shelved indefinitely.
"Unknowns are quite challenging, especially for athletes whose days
are mapped out from the minute they wake up to the minute they go to
sleep," Chalmers added.
"And that's everybody's fear, and especially mine, getting out of
that structured routine and just trying to work out what to do with
that free time now."
SHOCK PHASE
Health experts warn that a prolonged isolation could take a big
mental toll on people whose livelihoods and self esteem are
intrinsically linked to competition.
"A lot of athletes are still in an initial shock phase, probably
confused and also with some relief after all the chaos," Caroline
Anderson, a psychologist who works with professional and Olympic
athletes in Australia, told Reuters.
"Probably their two main coping strategies in life are having that
competitive edge and being able to really push themselves physically
for six-seven hours a day. They haven’t got that anymore which is
very difficult."
Chalmers has taken to yoga, hiking and an exercise bike to keep in
shape mentally and physically while he awaits the arrival of a
loaned swimming pool housed in a shipping container for his back
yard.
Former Olympic butterfly champion Chad le Clos is trying to make the
best of the situation by tethering himself to a bungee cord as he
swims in his own small backyard pool in Cape Town.
"It is not ideal, but you have to be creative given the limitations
you have," the South African told Reuters.
"That will help to keep me going."
The top athletes possess exceptional drive, talent and the ability
to perform under relentless pressure but they are no less vulnerable
to mental health problems.
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Emma Coburn of the U.S. in the women's 3000 metres steeplechase
final at International Stadium, Doha, Qatar - September 30, 2019.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
Many have spoken openly of their battles with depression and their
recoveries from nervous breakdowns. Others carry their burdens
quietly. A slew have committed suicide in recent years.
Self-isolation raises the threat of acute psychological events, and
not just for athletes with pre-existing conditions, psychologist
Anderson said.
"That sudden stopping of the sport, from a physiological or
biological standpoint, there’s a reduction in endorphins but also (a
loss of) identity," she said.
"They see themselves as athletes and sport is very tied up in that.
Without the sport, the inability to train, these are absolutely risk
factors."
'WIGGING OUT'
Many athletes are putting a brave face on the lockdown, converting
garages and bedrooms into home gymnasiums and posting cheerful
videos of themselves on social media keeping fit by "bench-pressing"
their children.
Tennis great Roger Federer cheered fans with a video of himself
practising trick-shots against an outdoor wall as it snowed at his
Switzerland home.
American middle distance runner Emma Coburn, who took bronze in the
3,000-metre steeplechase at Rio, told Reuters: "I'm not feeling
stress or anxiety about it. I enjoy in general being at home."
But the weeks and months of the lockdown will be a time when mental
health experts on the payroll of teams and federations earn their
keep as they try to plot a path for athletes in what is effectively
uncharted territory.
Frustration at the confinement has already spilled over on occasion,
with high profile soccer players getting into hot water for
breaching government orders on social distancing by hosting parties
and drinking sessions.
Such incidents usually occur as celebrations after competition, said
Gearoid Towey, the founder of Crossing the Line, a charity focusing
on the wellbeing of athletes.
"I think this is slightly different. There isn’t anything, per se,
to celebrate. People are locked up in their houses," he said.
"You're probably going to get some incidents but with all the mental
health resources in place, sports will generally know which athletes
might be prone to 'wigging out'.
"You'd like to think they’d have extra support for them."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom, Nick Mulvenney in Sydney, Amy Tennery in
New York and Nick Said in Cape Town. Writing by Ian Ransom and Nick
Mulvenney, editing by Peter Rutherford)
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