mental health Archives - Page 7 of 7 - Athletes for Hope

Join us for Athlete Mental Health Week 2025!


Time to Re-envision Resilience with Elite Athletes Leading the Way

Time to Re-envision Resilience with Elite Athletes Leading the Way

The 400-year sickness of racism continues to kill Black Americans, while a newer plague, COVID-19, has brought over 100,000 US deaths. That terrible loss of life does not fully encompass the current crisis, where traumatic grief, outrage, anger, and fear are themselves epidemic. The searing stress of unchecked racism burns like a national fever. Economic disruption, social distancing and sheltering at home add to the burden of coping. Mental health and domestic violence hotlines report large increases in calls for help. Alcohol and gun sales are up over 50%. While many people with mental health challenges suffer alone and in silence, others act out their emotional struggles, visiting their suffering on partners, family members, and in communities.

Living through this crisis has shown us how much our mental health and resilience depend on access to key psychological, social, and economic resources. In the case of athletes, critical coping resources like training facilities, workout opportunities, and team contacts are largely inaccessible. Opportunities to compete are mostly absent. Some colleges are cutting sport programs, and schedules at every level remain uncertain. Constrained from fully expressing their athletic identities and deprived of usual supports, athletes are facing significant mental health vulnerabilities.

Research suggests that, broadly speaking, elite athletes are no less vulnerable to mental health problems than the general population. A 2019 IOC review documented significant rates of depression, anxiety, sleep problems, disordered eating, and substance abuse among top athletes. A new NCAA study found a 150-250% increase in college athlete reports of mental health problems over comparable pre-COVID surveys, with athletes of color showing the highest level of concern. The current crisis is hitting athletes hard precisely because of the pressure for them to appear emotionally invulnerable.

The myth of athlete invulnerability has long hidden the human side of our sports heroes. Male and female athletes have long been taught to push against and push away their emotional needs, keeping their personal struggles secret. Mental toughness has meant a single-minded drive through adversity and an imperative to never show weakness. The toxic mix of inflexible, self-reliant coping strategies and denial of emotional vulnerability, forecloses help-seeking and can lead to tragic outcomes such as suicide, self-harm, domestic violence, sexual assault, and addiction.

Athletes facing today’s doubly shadowed valley of racism and pandemic need new sources of resilience, as their familiar strategies of toughening up and tightening down are not sufficient. To thrive in this unique period of adversity, athletes must break with outmoded assumptions about athletic strength and weakness, and acknowledge, accept, and embrace emotional vulnerability as an essential step toward mobilizing resilience. Today’s athletes have a unique opportunity to demonstrate what true courage looks like. They can embody emotionally healthy resilience, modeling the best of what we reach for, as competitors and as human beings.

Our hearts lift when we see the US Women’s Soccer team win the World Cup, marvel at the artistry of Michael Jordan, or watch Michael Phelps win 28 Olympic medals. But in the shadow of the triumphant champion athlete lies an impoverished image of healthy emotional life. Seeing athletic heroes as carefree entertainment icons, rather than as people who feel and fail, suffer and struggle, ill serves the human beings who give themselves over to the rigors of training and the demands of competitive excellence. The myth of athlete invulnerability leaves us with unhealthy role models and perpetuates the misconception that embracing vulnerability is a sign of weakness.

Fortunately, new images of athletic strength are emerging as courageous champions Hope Solo, Brandon Marshall, Kevin Love, Chamique Holdsclaw, Daniel Carcillo, Serena Williams, and others break the silence on emotional pain, acknowledge their vulnerabilities, and move beyond unhealthy, hyper-masculine models of mental toughness. They show us what it looks like to experience depression, anxiety, anger, fear, or shame, and then rise, moving forward with determination and dignity, undeterred by the old idea that vulnerability means weakness. These courageous leaders have shown us the way to humanizing heroes and normalizing vulnerability.

Busting free the myth of invulnerability liberates athletes from soul-crushing expectations. Courageously vulnerable athletes model a more balanced, humane, accepting, and affirming athletic identity. An emotionally healthy athletic culture acknowledges mental suffering as a part of human experience, endorses reaching out for support, rewards enlisting help when needed, and celebrates excellence achieved without the price of emotional and physical harm to self or to others.

Courageously vulnerable athletes elevate a new image of resilience, reducing stigma around emotional challenges and honoring strength in reaching out to supports. By embracing vulnerability and still rising, resilient athlete role models lead us along the path toward ending forever the silent suffering and harmful acting out that too many athletes, too many family members, too many fans, and too many communities have endured.

 

by

Jim Helling, LICSW, CMPC
Alliance of Social Workers in Sports

Suzanne Potts, LMSW, MPH
Athletes for Hope

Social Workers as Positive Sports Allies in Mental Health

Many athletes around the world are using their voices to advocate for change, and there are professional groups supporting them from a vast network from the field of social work. Across a large group of professional social workers runs a thread of interests and skills that focus on the advocacy, support and treatment of athletes. The Alliance of Social Workers in Sports (ASWIS) mission is, “.. is to promote individual and community well-being through partnerships between the profession of social work and the field of athletics. We focus on partnerships in practice, research, and policy, with involvement and awareness in all areas where social work and sports systems intersect“ and is a “..collective voice for social workers to advocate for and educate administrators and organizations about the breadth and depth social workers can uniquely bring to athletes and athlete culture.”

ASWIS was formed in 2015 to help provide a platform for social workers working with athletes or in sports to “partner with and contribute to all levels and call segments of sport.” This dynamic group of mental health professionals provides education, training, networking, collaboration and a certification program for social workers looking to work in sport. This network supports athletes by providing clinicians, consulting, resources and education to athletes at all levels of sport. Their membership has grown to over 400+ social workers working in sport, and provides an annual conference, committees in youth/college/professional sports, International sport, education and clinical practices.

AFH has been thrilled to work with Anita A. Daniels, MSW, LCSW, LCAS, CCS, current Vice President of ASWIS and founder at Actualities, Ltd, who hosted two free mental health check in sessions with the AFH athlete network last month. These sessions focused on athlete identity during the COVID crisis, addressing barriers and then discussing practical tips and resources that athletes at all levels could include to strengthen and support their mental health.The ASWIS network also created a comprehensive list of mental health COVID Responses and resources for their members. It can be found on their blog for those looking for specific pandemic support resources.

Here are two infographic resources ASWIS created to support and strengthen athlete mental health during a global pandemic.

 

We are collaborating with ASWIS to continue the dialogue on athlete mental health with an OpEd (coming soon!), more mental health resources and opportunities in the intersection between social work and sport. Their continued leadership and education about athlete mental health is leading the way for others interested in this space and we look forward to having more athlete voices at the table in discussing athlete mental health. AFH collaborated with mental health professionals to create a “Quick Hitter” graphic guide to athlete mental health. It’s meant to be a high level checklist of signs to look for, what to say and do and a few specific mental health resources if you suspect a teammate is struggling with their mental health.

The AFH team is committed to continue the conversation with our athlete network about mental health and advocate for resources, volunteers and more. Check out our recent collaboration with friends at DocWayne who hosted a Facebook live event for kids and COVID with Erica McLain, USATF, Olympian and advocate and look for more like this in the future.

 

 

Suzanne Potts LMSW, MPH
Director, AFH University