Houltberg Benjamin J, Wang Kenneth T, Qi Wei, Nelson Christina S
a Fuller Theological Seminary.
Res Q Exerc Sport. 2018 Sep;89(3):354-360. doi: 10.1080/02701367.2018.1481919. Epub 2018 Jul 9.
Further research is needed on factors related to the emotional health of elite athletes. Previous research has linked self-narratives of people or their narrative identities to their psychological well-being. However, no study has yet examined self-narratives among elite athletes.
This study examined whether specific profiles or narrative identities of athletes emerge through multiple self-narrative indicators; these profiles were compared on measures of psychological well-being (e.g., depression, anxiety, postfailure shame levels, and life satisfaction).
Self-report data were collected from a sample of elite athletes (n = 99, Mdn age = 22 years, 52% male, 53% individual sports) competing at a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division 1, professional, or Olympic level.
Latent profile analysis revealed 3 profile types that significantly differed on measures of psychological well-being. Athletes with a performance-based narrative identity (high perfectionism, fear of failure, and contingent self-worth) demonstrated the highest levels of psychological disruptions (highest levels of depression, anxiety, and shame; lowest levels of life satisfaction), whereas a purpose-based narrative identity (high purpose, global self-worth, positive view of self after sport) was associated with the highest level of psychological well-being (lowest levels of depression, anxiety, and shame; highest levels of life satisfaction). Athletes in the mixed-type profile class reported better psychological well-being compared with the performance-based profile class but not the purpose-based profile class.
Our findings provide initial evidence that particular self-narrative profiles of elite athletes contribute to their own psychological well-being in a significant way. Possible implications for practitioners are also discussed.
关于与精英运动员情绪健康相关的因素,还需要进一步研究。先前的研究已将人们的自我叙事或其叙事身份与他们的心理健康联系起来。然而,尚未有研究考察精英运动员中的自我叙事。
本研究考察运动员的特定概况或叙事身份是否通过多种自我叙事指标显现出来;在心理健康指标(如抑郁、焦虑、失败后羞耻水平和生活满意度)上对这些概况进行比较。
从参加美国全国大学体育协会第一分区、职业或奥运会级别的精英运动员样本(n = 99,中位年龄 = 22岁,52%为男性,53%从事个人项目)中收集自我报告数据。
潜在概况分析揭示了3种概况类型,它们在心理健康指标上有显著差异。具有基于表现的叙事身份(高度完美主义、害怕失败和条件性自我价值)的运动员表现出最高水平的心理困扰(抑郁、焦虑和羞耻水平最高;生活满意度最低),而基于目标的叙事身份(高目标、整体自我价值、运动后对自我的积极看法)与最高水平的心理健康相关(抑郁、焦虑和羞耻水平最低;生活满意度最高)。混合型概况类别的运动员与基于表现的概况类别相比,心理健康状况更好,但与基于目标的概况类别相比则不然。
我们的研究结果提供了初步证据,表明精英运动员特定的自我叙事概况对他们自身的心理健康有显著贡献。还讨论了对从业者可能的启示。