Boudreau Patrick, Mackenzie Susan Houge, Hodge Ken
Department of Tourism, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054, New Zealand.
School of Physical Education, Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Otago P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054, New Zealand.
Psychol Sport Exerc. 2022 Sep;62:102245. doi: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2022.102245. Epub 2022 Jun 17.
Research conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the value of physical activity and nature for psychological well-being in the general population when people's mobility and activities are restricted due to government mandates. Since restrictions may thwart the psychological benefits reported from participation in adventure recreation (e.g., rock-climbing, white-water kayaking), it is important to understand the psychological well-being of people who previously benefited from adventure opportunities. Thus, the purpose of this study was to investigate the lived experiences and psychological well-being of adventure recreation participants during COVID-19 restrictions.
A descriptive phenomenological approach was used.
Participants were fifteen men, four women, and one non-binary person who engaged in a variety of adventure recreation activities that included ski-mountaineering, free-diving, rock-climbing, white-water kayaking, back-country skiing, skydiving, SCUBA diving, BASE jumping, and mountaineering. Participants had an average of 11.7 years of experience in at least one of their preferred adventure recreation activities. Participants were invited to take part in a visual and audio-recorded semi-structured interview on Zoom. Interviews lasted on average 69.3 min. Reflexive thematic analysis was undertaken inductively.
Overall, participants discussed a range of nuanced impacts that COVID-19 restrictions had on their psychological well-being. Participants discussed how resulted from restricted opportunities for physical and mental challenges, emotion regulation, connections to nature and people, and excitement. However, participants also benefited from several , such as reflecting on past adventures, a reduced need to compare themselves socially, and opportunities to spend quality time with others. Participants also explained how 'adventure-based mindsets' (e.g., resilience, focusing on controllable elements, humility) were protective strategies they used to limit the ill-being impacts of COVID-19 restrictions.
This study extends the alternative sport and exercise literature by illustrating how participation in adventure has the potential to enhance participants' resilience and their ability to maintain psychological well-being across diverse and novel contexts (e.g., the COVID-19 pandemic).
在新冠疫情期间开展的研究强调,当人们的行动和活动因政府指令而受到限制时,体育活动和自然环境对普通人群心理健康的价值。由于这些限制可能会阻碍参与冒险娱乐活动(如攀岩、白水皮划艇)所带来的心理益处,了解那些曾从冒险机会中受益的人的心理健康状况就显得尤为重要。因此,本研究的目的是调查新冠疫情限制期间冒险娱乐活动参与者的生活经历和心理健康状况。
采用描述性现象学方法。
参与者包括15名男性、4名女性和1名非二元性别人士,他们参与了各种冒险娱乐活动,包括滑雪登山、自由潜水、攀岩、白水皮划艇、野外滑雪、跳伞、水肺潜水、定点跳伞和登山。参与者在至少一项他们喜欢的冒险娱乐活动中的平均经验为11.7年。参与者被邀请在Zoom上参加一次视觉和音频记录的半结构化访谈。访谈平均持续69.3分钟。采用归纳式反思主题分析。
总体而言,参与者讨论了新冠疫情限制对其心理健康产生的一系列细微影响。参与者讨论了这些限制如何导致身体和精神挑战、情绪调节、与自然和他人的联系以及刺激感的机会受限。然而,参与者也从一些方面受益,比如反思过去的冒险经历、减少社交比较的需求以及有机会与他人共度美好时光。参与者还解释了“基于冒险的思维方式”(如复原力、关注可控因素、谦逊)是他们用来限制新冠疫情限制带来的不良影响的保护策略。
本研究通过说明参与冒险活动如何有可能增强参与者的复原力以及他们在不同和新颖情境(如新冠疫情)中保持心理健康的能力,扩展了替代运动和锻炼的文献。