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On April 12, 2003 Chicago
Cubs’, ‘corky’,
controversial homerun slugger, Sammy
Sosa was corked (sorry, I couldn’t
resist) in the head by a pitch. Since
that beaning, “Slamming Sammy”
has been more like “Fanning
Sammy.” He’s hit only
one home run, has struck out 40 times
and is in the midst of a prolonged
batting slump. Simply put, he hasn’t
been the same since he was injured.
In this special issue of the Mental
Toughness Newsletter we’re going
to explore EXACTLY WHY. What a lot
of athletes, parents and coaches don’t
realize is that underpinning most
repetitive performance problems, slumps and blocks is one
or more physical or mental injuries
or “trauma.” The trauma
can be an actual physical injury like
a broken wrist, torn ACL, badly sprained
ankle, a painful collision with an
opponent, a bad fall off the horse,
or, like in Sammy’s case, getting
hit by a pitch. The trauma can also
be more psychological and emotional
rather than physical. For example,
sometimes the fear associated with
a fall in the gym is much more profound
than the actual physical injuries
sustained. Or in other situations,
the athlete can be badly embarrassed
or humiliated in front of his teammates
by his coach or suffer some other
form of negative performance experience,
i.e choking, failing, getting cut
from a team, etc. These physical and
emotional traumatic experiences seem
to lodge themselves in the athlete’s
mind and body (neurology and physiology),
immediately showing up as performance
problems right after the trauma, or
lying dormant for any number of weeks
or months before rearing their ugly
little head. These kinds of trauma-based
performance slumps are particularly
resistant to more normal kinds of
intervention by parents, coaches or
even other sports psychologists. It
seems that no matter what the athlete,
parents or coaches try, the performance
block or slump will not release its’
nasty grip. Of course, the athlete’s
futile efforts to extricate himself
only leads him deeper and deeper into
the maze of increasing frustration,
decreasing self-confidence and increasing
anxiety that always seems to make
the whole situation that much worse.
For years I have
been battling all kinds of performance
problems in athletes as well as other
performers outside of sports, (public
speakers, test takers, performing
artists, etc.). With many kinds of
performance difficulties I have had
great success. However, with these
fear based, trauma induced performance
problems I have had only mixed results.
It has been a very humbling and frustrating
experience for me. Don’t get
me wrong. I’ve had my share
of successes, but as far as I was
concerned, there weren’t enough
of them in these situations. It just
seemed that these SPORTS PTSD (Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder) problems
resisted the treatment model that
I had developed and perfected over
the years. That left me feeling intensely
frustrated and inadequate. Why? I
am a puzzle solver. This is what I
do. I love solving performance problems.
When I can’t, it makes me very
unhappy. My unhappiness and frustration
led me on a quest for answers. I knew
that I was missing something very
important. I just knew that there
had to be a more effective way of
working with these more resistant,
trauma-based problems. Sometime last
year, I found exactly what I had been
looking for….the solution to
Sports PTSD! EMDR and The Grand System.
SLUMPS,
FEARS & BLOCKS - OVERCOMING “TRAUMA”
BASED PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
WHERE THE “SPORTS PTSD”
PROBLEM COMES FROM:
For most of her soccer
career, Meg was an all-star keeper.
She had great reflexes, tremendous
speed and a good head for the game.
Her instincts were uncanny and she
elevated the play of any team she
was a part of. Right through junior
soccer, ODP and high school ball she
dominated the competition and controlled
the game. She always seemed to be
one of the best players out there
on the pitch. One reason for this
was that Meg was simply fearless in
the net. She never hesitated to move
off the line when the situation called
for it and her aggressive play intimidated
opponents, distracting them into thinking
about her instead of what they were
doing. She was All-State in high school
four years in a row, got a full ride
to a top Division I program and had
a very successful collegiate career,
playing on a National Championship
team and being named Collegiate All
American several years in a row. Meg
had been on the U18 National team
going into college and continued to
play at a national level right up
until the accident. She was so close
to making the world cup team when
it happened.
It had been a fiercely
fought game up to that point and she
had already made two spectacular saves.
The other team was bringing the ball
up to her left, when one of their
forwards hit a cross in an attempt
to set up a streaking teammate. As
the situation called for, Meg came
out fast and aggressively to the ball
and collided hard with this player.
The sound of the collision was so
loud that Meg’s teammates on
offense at the other end of the field
could actually hear it. Both athletes
went down in a tangle of arms and
legs. The opposing player although
badly shaken, eventually got back
up. However, Meg still lay on the
ground writhing in pain, holding her
right knee and screaming uncontrollably.
She had broken her kneecap and ripped
her ACL in the process. While she
knew she was badly hurt, she never
could have guessed that she was out
for the season and then some.
The rehab process
was long, hard and extremely painful.
The physical pain was the least of
Meg’s discomfort and that was
certainly no picnic. Her rehab sessions
were so excruciating that they frequently
left her in tears, and this from an
athlete who prided herself on being
hard-nosed and tough. However, her
physical pain was nothing compared
to the emotional turmoil that the
injury had caused her. For the very
first time in her life troubling self-doubts
crept in. She was frustrated that
she couldn’t play and increasingly
concerned at how long she had to be
out of the game. She’d missed
a game or two during her career, but
had never been this badly injured
that she had to be out almost a year.
She worried about her comeback. She
worried about whether her knee would
heal properly and hold up under the
physical demands of her game. She
worried about losing a spot on the
National team. Not being able to train
was driving her absolutely crazy and,
for the very first time since she
had started playing this game, she
worried about her competition and
not measuring up.
As
her knee gradually healed, she increased
the intensity and breadth of her training.
It was a happy day when she was finally
able to get back into the net and
start training again against real
shooters and real shots instead of
the imaginary ones that she had been
“practicing” against in
her imagination almost every day since
her injury. Her confidence started
to grow and it didn’t take her
very long before she started feeling
like her old self again. Finally,
after almost an entire calendar year
off from competition, she was back
between the posts ready for her first
high-level scrimmage at a national
team training camp. She felt good
physically, was in incredible shape
and maybe even stronger than she had
been before her accident. She was
psyched to be playing again and couldn’t
wait to reassert her dominance as
THE keeper on the team.
However, somewhere
inside something wasn’t right.
While she couldn’t quite put
her finger on it, there was something
uncomfortable nagging at her. In the
back of her mind there was a kernel
of doubt beginning to fester. It’s
not that she could clearly articulate
it. She just felt it, beginning to
gradually settle over her like some
black cloud. Very early in the first
half of the scrimmage she was faced
with her first real challenge. The
opposing striker had broken free and
was closing on goal. Meg came out
to meet her but there was something
distinctly wrong about her challenge.
Meg had come off the line late and
in doing so was unusually tentative.
This was NOT characteristic of her
typical style of play. Watching from
the sidelines the coaches later told
her that she looked almost “gun-shy”,
like she was afraid of getting re-injured.
A few minutes later, when the opposing
team crossed the ball in front of
her net she was not her old aggressive
self. Instead of coming out hard and
challenging the opponent, she hung
back. It was this second incident
that really got her attention and
was most disturbing to her. She always
came out on crosses. What was going
on?
As she later described
the situation to me, she talked about
having this little fear “in
the back of my mind that I just couldn’t
shake.” She felt like somehow
she was going to get injured all over
again. She knew the fear wasn’t
rational. She knew her knee had healed
completely. She knew that she was
in great shape and had recovered fully.
She knew what she was supposed to
do tactically. In fact, her superior
knowledge and instincts were second
nature. However, something was holding
her back, overriding her natural instincts
and no amount of inner pleading, prodding
or ranting and raving could get her
to go out and do what she knew she
needed to. After several scrimmages
and two games she had not been able
to shake the uneasiness that she felt
whenever she stepped into goal. In
fact, it seemed to only get worse.
While the coaches were understanding
of her situation, they simply couldn’t
afford to keep her in goal if she
was going to be playing so tentatively.
When she was unable to regain her
starting spot her confidence plummeted.
What she couldn’t understand
was, why, after almost two years was
she still feeling so tentative between
the posts…………?

Paul was a talented
high school baseball player who was
referred to me by his coach because
of an uncharacteristic and prolonged
batting slump during the athlete’s
all- important junior year. Paul had
started on varsity as a freshman and
batted .418 leading his team in both
batting average and runs batted in.
He continued his torrid pace into
sophomore year and was the leading
hitter on the team going into conference
playoffs. An aggressive and smart
hitter, Paul was tough to strike out,
boasting the lowest strikeout stats
on the team. He put opposing pitchers
under tremendous pressure because
of this and his patience up at the
plate. When runners were on, Paul
was even more deadly and had hit himself
into the cleanup position on one of
the better high school squads in the
conference.
In the first game
of the playoffs during his sophomore
year, Paul went 4 for 5 with two doubles,
two singles and 4 runs batted in to
almost single-handedly lead his team
into the second round. Paul was absolutely
on fire. In the next quarterfinal
match-up he went two for four driving
in the game-winning run. The problem
really had its’ roots in his
first at-bat in the next game, the
semi finals. Paul was facing a big
lefty who threw with a lot of speed
but not very much control. In fact,
this pitcher had a reputation for
wildness all around the league. It
wasn’t as if this hurler was
doing it on purpose. Truth be told,
he just didn’t have enough control
to hit people on purpose. He was just
simply a bit out of control.
When Paul stepped
up to the plate there was a runner
on first. He quickly got ahead in
the count 3 balls, 1 strike. The way
Paul described it, the next pitch
looked like a straight fastball. It
was his pitch, no problem at all.
However, as Paul went to turn on it,
the pitch ran in on him, hitting him
on both hands, shattering one of his
knuckles of his right hand and badly
bruising his left thumb.
Paul tried to finish
out the game but his right hand was
so swollen and painful that he couldn’t
even pick up a bat. End of playoffs!
End of season! End of his personal
dream to play in the Championship
game! With the extent of his injury,
he was out of commission for a good
six weeks. When he had fully healed
and finally got himself back into
playing shape sometime in the middle
of summer league play, he was no longer
the same ball player. He was far more
tentative up at the plate and would
take his stance much further from
the plate than he used to. He almost
looked like he was leaning back on
his heels as the pitcher began his
delivery. To make matters worse Paul
seemed to stop trusting his instincts
and now spent a lot of time up at
the plate over-thinking and trying
to guess what pitches were going to
be thrown at him. As a result he got
caught looking a lot, something that
rarely happened to him before the
accident. When he did swing, his timing
was way off and his swing looked rushed.
As a result, Paul’s batting
average dropped off the face of the
earth.
However, what was
far more painful for Paul than his
shrinking batting average was how
he now felt up at the plate. He was
no longer that carefree, aggressive
hitter. He hated that he couldn’t
just get up there and swing the bat.
It felt like he was holding back somehow.
Somewhere in the back of his mind
there was this lingering tendril of
fear that would wrap itself around
his hands and arms and not let go.
He was convinced he was going to get
hit again and badly hurt. No matter
how much he tried to reassure himself
or build up his confidence, Paul just
couldn’t seem to shake free
of that dumb little nagging fear.
Even doing some intensive work with
his old hitting coach didn’t
seem to help very much. What panicked
Paul the most was that this was his
junior year and the most important
time to impress the college scouts.
With his hitting going down the tubes,
he worried that the better baseball
programs would no longer be interested
in him……

The
incident happened almost two years
ago and yet it was still as fresh
in Amanda’s mind as if it had
happened just yesterday. Amanda was
learning a very simple release move
from low bar to high bar. She had
done it several times before, but
today, for some reason she was far
more scared. Perhaps this was because
her trusted coach wasn’t in
the gym and instead she had to work
with someone that she didn’t
really know that well. To make matters
worse, he had gone and set the bars
as far apart as they could possibly
go. This was a problem for Amanda
who was a relatively small girl. In
fact, when she worked with Jaime,
her regular coach the bars were never
that far apart. Amanda instinctively
knew that this was going to be a stretch
for her and that it wasn’t safe.
I suppose you could say that this
is what ignited her fear.
To prove some obscure
point her male coach insisted that
all the girls use this distance, regardless
of their size. This freaked Amanda
out and as her turn approached, she
became more and more fearful. By the
time that it was her turn to go, her
nervousness was close to paralyzing.
She fearfully asked the coach if he
could please move the bars closer
together. He refused, explaining to
her that she was perfectly capable
of making this distance. In response,
Amanda just stood there, petrified.
Her coach tried to be supportive but
there was a noticeable strain of impatience
in his voice. When she refused to
go, explaining that the bars were
too far apart, his veneer of patience
and understanding cracked. He began
a power struggle with her, insisting
that she go. This only scared the
girl even more and she dug her heels
in, once again refusing to go. Then
the coach turned nasty and began to
berate Amanda in front of her teammates.
He told her that she was a “chicken”
and that even the youngest team member
could do what she was so afraid of.
The tension between the two of them
escalated as it was played out in
front of the other eight girls on
the team.
Once again the coach
demanded that Amanda go for the skill.
Once more she refused. He began to
raise his voice and then threatened
to move her down to a lower group
with the “little girls”
unless she went. He told her that
the rest of the team would just have
to stand there and wait for however
long it took until she stopped being
a chicken and went. Amanda’s
fear was now heading off the charts
at this point and her instincts told
her not to budge. However, the coach
only increased the pressure, embarrassing
her further and demanding that she
go. Her teammates, in an attempt to
be positive and supportive said, “C’mon
Amanda! You can do this. Just try!”
However, the poor girl felt no support
from her friends, only more pressure.
Feeling cornered, with her coach threatening
her even more and, against her better
judgment she forced herself to throw
the skill.
With adrenalin overflowing
her system, she threw herself from
the low bar to the high bar with such
force that she completely overshot
her target, her hands easily ripping
off the high bar as she flew by. She
landed in a heap on her face, getting
the wind knocked out of her and immediately
burst into tears. Her coach quickly
came over to her and when he saw that
other than being scared she was OK
said, “You know, Amanda, you’re
just going to have to get back up
there and do it again!” Despite
the fact that she had only bruised
her chin and side, she hadn’t
really suffered any serious injury.
However, from that point on, Amanda
refused to jump from the low bar to
the high bar. It didn’t even
matter if the coaches put the bars
as close together as possible and
spotted her, she still refused to
go.
There was absolutely
no question that Amanda had the ability
to physically execute the skill. However,
she claimed that she was far too afraid
to do it. She no longer cared what
the coaches said or did to her. There
was no way she would ever do that
skill again! Very simply, the little
girl had been traumatized by this
experience with her coach. It wasn’t
the actual fall that scared her. It
wasn’t the actual skill that
was frightening. It was more the pressure,
threats and humiliation at the hands
of this coach that had really lodged
themselves into Amanda’s psyche.
Meg,
Paul and Amanda demonstrate the devastating
effects of SPORTS PTSD, (Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder) a frequently occurring,
“trauma based” performance
problem in athletes. In SPORTS PTSD,
the physical and/or emotional trauma
gets stuck in the athlete’s
neurology and physiology. In plain
English this means that the trauma
gets embedded into the athlete’s
mind and body, and no amount of external
or internal threats, cajoling, bribes,
pressure or assurances of safety can
change this situation for the athlete.
Without a chance to adequately work
the traumatic experience through it
ends up significantly interfering
with subsequent performances long
into the future. Frequently the athlete
isn’t even aware that these
past injuries or trauma are fueling
her current problems. She may report
being scared, feeling tentative or
out of sync. She may refer to something
bothering her, “in the back
of my mind.” She may talk about
needing to “have my brain changed.”
Or she may just complain of low self-confidence.
Coaches and parents can plainly see
that something isn’t quite right
and while they may be able to make
educated guesses about why the athlete
may be tentative or afraid, they can’t
understand why the problem still persists
or what can be done to constructively
change it. Why? The trauma is alive
and well within the athlete stealing
her heart and courage, feeding her
tentativeness and making a smooth,
fluid execution impossible. How does
this work?
TRAUMA
& YOUR BODY – HOW IT AFFECTS
PERFORMANCE & FUELS REPETITIVE
PROBLEMS
On one hand, the
mental effects of a past emotional
or physical trauma or injury on an
athlete’s present performances
are relatively straightforward. For
example, if I’m worried about
re-injury, failure or getting yelled
at and embarrassed by my coach again,
then my pre- and during performance
self-talk and concentration will focus
on all these wrong things. Because
my concentration is off, I will unknowingly
begin to undermine my self-confidence
and send my anxiety level soaring
through the roof. As I get more and
more nervous, my muscles will automatically
tighten, making it impossible for
me to execute smoothly and effectively.
Tight muscles always lead to stiff,
mechanical and shorter movements,
slowed down reflexes and reaction
time, slower foot speed and body movement,
mistiming, and sub-par execution.
So on a more conscious mind-body level,
worry about the trauma or failing
again will completely disrupt my attempts
to return my performance to normal.
Unfortunately, this is not all that
the blocked and fearful athlete is
dealing with. More subtle physical
after-effects of the trauma are also
operating within his body, just outside
of the athlete’s awareness.
Let me explain.
All traumas produce
an instinctive, physiological fear
reaction within the human organism.
For example, when an individual is
confronted by an attacker, he automatically
responds defensively by either pulling
his arms in to protect himself from
a blow or holding his arms straight
out in a defensive position with his
hands up and wrists laid back, palms
facing outward. In addition, the individual
defensively rises up and rocks back
on his heels. A similar defensive
response can be seen when an athlete
falls and attempts to break the fall
by extending both arms outward, with
wrists and palms laid back.
After a physical
or emotional trauma, these instinctive
bodily reactions to fear can get unconsciously
triggered whenever the athlete is
in certain stressful, performance
situations reminiscent of the original
trauma. For example, the athlete has
to return to the same environment
where he sustained his injury, I.e.
the batter stepping into the batter’s
box, the skier getting in the starting
gate, the gymnast having to get back
up on beam or the soccer keeper stepping
back into goal. When this physical
response to fear is internally triggered,
the athlete’s muscles begin
to work against themselves. Let me
use throwing as an example:
Throwing a baseball
or softball accurately requires that
the ball player follow through in
a downward motion with his/her arm
and hand, snapping the wrist downward
in the process of a smooth follow-through.
However, this natural throwing motion
is actually counter to the upward
and backward arm, hand and wrist motions
seen in the fear response. It’s
not as if the athlete’s arms
literally move into that protective,
defensive position. It’s far
subtler than that. The result: Tension
in the throwing motion, which completely
disrupts the throwing mechanics causing
a slow-down in ball speed as well
as accuracy and control problem. What
does this look like?
Think about the outfielder
or catcher who finds himself suddenly
double pumping the ball every time
he/she goes to throw it. Better yet,
think about Chuck Knoblach’s
throwing problems when he was the
second baseman for the Yankees. Knoblach
was continually throwing the ball
wildly over the first baseman’s
head into the stands. Why? One set
of muscles was trying to respond with
a smooth and fluid execution while
another part was responding in an
opposing way out of tension and fear,
(perhaps of messing up again and humiliating
himself in the media fishbowl that
is Yankee Stadium). A similar internal
muscular battle can be seen in the
skier who has suffered a serious injury
from a bad fall and now is trying
to return to top racing form. Despite
his training to stay low, lean into
the slope and attack the course, his
instinctive, fear-response muscle
memory from the prior trauma is unconsciously
operating to keep him sitting up too
high and leaning too far back on his
skis. As a consequence his times are
consistently and disappointingly slow.
HOW
YOU “DIGEST” EXPERIENCE
- THE NATURAL ASSIMILATION PROCESS
Physically the human
organism has a built in tendency towards
health. When we are sick or injured
our natural body defenses automatically
kick in and mobilize to fight infection
and help us heal. For example, if
you’re cut, there is an immediate
increase in blood flow to the wound
site, accompanied by an influx of
white blood cells to help battle infection.
In addition, the clotting process
begins and the body sets in motion
its’ own self-healing process.
The human body has all the resources
within it to promote healing.
This same type of
natural healing process operates for
psychological and emotional experiences
that we have in our life. In other
words, we are always trying to “digest”
various experiences, assimilating
the good parts to distill out the
learning, and then eliminating the
bad parts. This “natural assimilation
process” allows us to then look
back on an experience that we had
in the past and be left with only
a memory, and without much distressing
affect or emotion. However, this natural
assimilation process gets interrupted
when an individual experiences a trauma.
The trauma can be physical like a
bad fall, broken bone or otherwise
painful injury. The trauma can be
emotional/psychological like a bad
scare, humiliation at the hands of
a coach or any negative performance
experience like choking or a tough
loss. Most often these traumas are
combinations of the two. Whether physical
or emotional/psychological, the trauma
can be considered either major or
minor. A major trauma is a life threatening
experience, severe injury, or sexual
abuse. A minor trauma could be an
insignificant injury, not making varsity,
or something as small as committing
an error and feeling embarrassed in
front of your peers.
Regardless of the
trauma, the individual is unable to
“digest” or work through
the traumatic experience. As a result
of the natural assimilation process
being interrupted, the traumatic experience
stays in the athlete’s system
in an isolated state in his neurology
and physiology with the same powerful
physical feelings, emotions and images.
Because the negative experience remains
isolated, the athlete is unable to
make use of prior or subsequent positive
learning. For example an athlete may
know it’s safe to dive, may
be consciously aware that she has
the technique to execute this dive
correctly. However, she is unable
to utilize that knowledge to break
through her fears and block.
When the athlete
either consciously thinks back to
the trauma or is unconsciously reminded
of it, he doesn’t just call
up a visual memory. Instead, he “re-experiences”
the trauma emotionally and physically.
At times his/her experience can be
so vivid that it feels as if the athlete
is actually going through the experience
all over again. An example: A gymnast
dislocated both of her arms and shattered
her right one in a very bad fall off
of bars. She worked very hard to get
herself back in the gym and regain
her confidence on the apparatus. It
took her almost the entire next year
to get over her fears to the point
where she was finally able to throw
the skill that she had originally
injured herself on. Then one night,
approximately one year after this
accident she had a vivid nightmare
in which she experienced herself suffering
the very same injury, but this time
on floor. She awoke in a state of
panic, terrified that the accident
was indeed going to happen to her
all over again. This gymnast could
barely get herself to the gym the
next day and her fears were so overpowering
and debilitating that she wasn’t
even able to attempt the simplest
of her skills with a spot from the
coach. After several weeks of this
paralyzing fear she was totally discouraged
and ready to quit the sport for good.
The re-experiencing
of a traumatic evident is actually
a PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder)
episode. The athlete in this situation
is just like the combat veteran who,
upon hearing a loud noise, suddenly
begins to re-experience himself “back
in the battle” with all its’
attendant images, emotions, physical
feelings and smells. Truth be told,
our gymnast had never really gotten
over or assimilated her original accident.
Sure, she had willed herself to “work
through” her fears and clawed
her way back so that she could finally
do her skills. However, the actual
“progress” that she had
made was more like a house of cards.
The original trauma that she had undergone
was still very much “alive and
well” in her neurology and physiology
and was quickly and easily brought
back to her in all its’ disruptive
power by the dream. In this case,
if she hadn’t had the dream,
another fall or near miss would have
done the very same thing to her.
In the past, these
kinds of cases would have completely
stymied and frustrated me because
I would have only worked on them near
the surface, rather than at their
core. In this way I would have been
like a gardener pulling weeds but
leaving the roots. In no time at all,
the nuisance plant reemerges as a
whole. I may have helped a gymnast
temporarily recover from her fear
only to be faced with an even stronger
one the next time that athlete had
a close call or another fall. Once
her terror remerged in all its’
vividness and power, I would have
felt as inadequate, stuck and helpless
as this poor gymnast did. The bottom
line is very simple: Unless you deal
with the underlying trauma that the
athlete experienced, you’re
pulling up weeds without the roots.
TREATING
“SPORTS PTSD” USING EMDR
AND THE GRAND SYSTEM
Last year I attended
a performance enhancement workshop
given by Dr. David Grand that opened
my eyes and completely changed the
way that I look at sports psychology
and performance problems. Dr. Grand’s
specialty is using EMDR for performance
enhancement with athletes and other
performers outside of sports. EMDR
(Eye Movement Desensitization and
Reprocessing) is a treatment method
discovered in California in 1987 by
Dr. Francine Shapiro, a clinical psychologist.
It has revolutionized the treatment
of PTSD (resulting from traumas such
as accidents, muggings, natural disasters
and combat experiences), which now
can be successfully resolved by application
of EMDR in days instead of months
or years. Dr. Grand has done some
critically important pioneering work
in the field of sports psychology
using EMDR. His method of working,
called the Grand System is the most
powerful tool in performance enhancement
work that I’ve come across in
my 20 years in this field.
To better understand
how EMDR works with athletes, let’s
briefly look more closely at the neurophysiological
effects of trauma. During and after
a negative performance experience
(i.e. choking, a humiliating failure,
an injury, etc.) the athlete’s
brain secretes progressively increasing
levels of a chemical called norepinephrine,
a stimulant neurotransmitter associated
with trauma. Norepinephrine then leads
to a state of hyper-alertness and
intense anxiety. In addition, this
neurotransmitter contributes to a
looped replaying of the distressing
event(s) in the athlete’s mind.
Think of the impact such a continuous
replaying of a significant trauma
would have on the average athlete.
The athlete gets caught in a self-perpetuating,
negative spiral. He becomes more and
more anxious, can’t concentrate
and is overwhelmed by negative thinking
and self-doubts. The performance effects
of this negative spiral are obvious:
Consistently poor performance.
HOW
EMDR WORKS
EMDR utilizes what’s
called “bilateral stimulation”
of the brain to restore the natural
assimilation process and help the
athlete successfully process through
the traumatic event or negative performance
experience. Bilateral stimulation
of the brain means alternating, left
to right eye movements, alternating
left to right tactile stimulation
or left to right auditory stimulation,
(the athlete listens to a specially
designed CD that plays back and forth
from the left ear to the right). This
“bilateral stimulation”
of the brain is said to help resynchronize
the firing of the two brain hemispheres
and aids in restoring the brain wave
activity and chemical secretions to
a normal state.
During an EMDR session,
the athlete is helped to focus on
his traumatic experiences along with
his distorted beliefs, emotions and
fears, as well as what he’s
feeling physically in his body. Gradually
a complete reprocessing of the event
and its’ attached memories occurs
while the accompanying feelings from
the trauma are altered and released.
The athlete’s negative beliefs
and distortions are then corrected
and replaced by a more realistic and
positive appraisal of the traumatic
experience, (i.e "I’m a
talented athlete who just had a bad
day" or “That’s is
the past and I’m safe now. I
can go hard without fear of re-injury.”).
The Grand system of Sports EMDR physiologically
accomplishes a rebalancing, restores
the previous level of performance
and fosters enhanced performance in
the future.
Sports EMDR gets
at the problem right at its’
roots and helps completely remove
it from the athlete’s mind and
body. According to Dr. Grand, “people
‘bring to the plate’ all
of their life experiences...EMDR reaches
deep into the nervous system and lets
people work on releasing traumatic
memories. They begin to make a connection
between the memory and what they are
experiencing in the present."
By releasing the traumatic memories
and the physical sensations that go
with them, the athlete becomes freed
up enough to begin to perform at his
potential again.
WHAT
COACHES AND PARENTS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT
“SPORTS PTSD
”So many fear-based
blocks do not make any logical sense
to the adults involved. Parents and
coaches can clearly see that there
seems to be no apparent reason for
the athlete to continue to struggle.
As a consequence, they may begin to
pressure the athlete or attribute
her performance difficulties to being
“willful” or “stubborn.”
This reaction from the athlete’s
parents or coaches only adds insult
to injury. In fact, it frequently
serves as yet another source of trauma
for the athlete and its’ disruptive
effects get stacked upon the original
trauma. The end result: She gets even
more stuck and her performance deteriorates
further!
Understand that no
athlete in her right mind would consciously
choose to be stuck, paralyzed by fears
or consistently fall apart under pressure.
Also, know that your being unable
to understand why the athlete is struggling
when you think that she shouldn’t
be, does NOT help that athlete get
unstuck in any way! Demanding that
she simply “do it” or
“go for it” is of absolutely
NO use to her. If she could go for
it, play better or be more aggressive,
then she would! If it were as simple
as making a conscious decision to
not be afraid up at the plate or to
throw her round-off, back handspring,
back tuck, then she would! As I’ve
explained, the roots of the problem
run much deeper than that. The athlete
needs help in removing the trauma
from her mind and body. As an appropriate
adult, you must be supportive, kind
and understanding. Impatience and
intolerance of these kinds of performance
problems will only serve to compound
the problem.
FOR MORE
DETAILED INFORMATION ABOUT WHETHER
DR. G’S SPORTS EMDR IS APPROPRIATE
FOR AN ATHLETE THAT YOU KNOW, CALL
HIM TODAY AT (413) 549-1085.
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