Bill Tatjana, Dessart Grégory, Antonini Philippe Roberta
Institut des Sciences du Sport, Faculté des Sciences Sociales et Politiques, Université de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Institut de Sciences Sociales des Religions, Université de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Sports (Basel). 2024 May 28;12(6):149. doi: 10.3390/sports12060149.
Sport psychology research of ultra-endurance (UE) athletes focused predominantly on their psychological characteristics, traits, and behaviors. However, their happiness and passion, as well as a unified framework for UE hobby phenomenon, were not sufficiently investigated. This study aims to: (1) identify the main contributors to happiness and passion of non-professional UE athletes; and (2) explore the possible relationships between types of sport passion, motivation, and athletic identity. During data collection, 116 non-professional UE athletes (mean age 43.66 years, SD = 8.97, 16.4% female) responded to an online questionnaire. Statistical analyses revealed that obsessive UE passion ( < 0.05) and amotivation ( < 0.05) predicted lower levels of happiness. A higher level of obsessive passion was predicted by extrinsic motivation ( < 0.005), amotivation ( < 0.05), and exclusivity identity ( < 0.001); a lower level was predicted by social identity ( < 0.05) and years in sports ( < 0.05). Weekly training hours and age correlated positively with passion strength, while amotivation was strongly negatively related to training volume. These results indicate that happiness of UE athletes depends on the type of sport passion formed and the quality of the underlying motivation: obsessive passion and amotivation seem to be the main enemies of happiness for UE athletes. This novel finding connecting passion, happiness, and motivation contributes to both a better understanding of the psychology of UE athletes and has practical implications for UE athletes, coaches, athletes' social circles, and sport psychologists. Due to known maladaptive outcomes of obsessive passion, including its negative impact on overall well-being, health, and now also on happiness, its formation in UE athletes needs to be observed and prevented. While the study shows predictors of obsessive passion and high vs. low obsessive passion, future research should investigate how harmonious passion impacts athletes' happiness, motivation, and identity. Likewise, research among the UE entourage would help to better understand the social impact of UE as a serious hobby and the formation of UE lifestyles. We also suggest our Temporal Framework for Progressive UE Engagement and Passion, which was further developed based on the results of this study, to be used and validated by sport psychologists.
对超长耐力(UE)运动员的运动心理学研究主要集中在他们的心理特征、特质和行为上。然而,他们的幸福感和热情,以及关于UE爱好现象的统一框架,尚未得到充分研究。本研究旨在:(1)确定非职业UE运动员幸福感和热情的主要影响因素;(2)探索运动热情类型、动机和运动身份之间可能存在的关系。在数据收集过程中,116名非职业UE运动员(平均年龄43.66岁,标准差=8.97,女性占16.4%)回答了一份在线问卷。统计分析表明,强迫性UE热情(<0.05)和无动机感(<0.05)预示着较低的幸福感水平。外在动机(<0.005)、无动机感(<0.05)和排他性身份(<0.001)预示着较高水平的强迫性热情;社会身份(<0.05)和运动年限(<0.05)预示着较低水平的强迫性热情。每周训练时长和年龄与热情强度呈正相关,而无动机感与训练量呈强烈负相关。这些结果表明,UE运动员的幸福感取决于形成的运动热情类型和潜在动机的质量:强迫性热情和无动机感似乎是UE运动员幸福感的主要敌人。这一将热情、幸福和动机联系起来的新发现,有助于更好地理解UE运动员的心理,对UE运动员、教练、运动员的社交圈子和运动心理学家都具有实际意义。由于已知强迫性热情会产生适应不良的结果,包括对整体幸福感、健康以及现在对幸福感的负面影响,因此需要观察并防止其在UE运动员中形成。虽然该研究显示了强迫性热情以及高与低强迫性热情的预测因素,但未来的研究应调查和谐热情如何影响运动员的幸福感、动机和身份。同样,对UE相关人员的研究将有助于更好地理解UE作为一种严肃爱好的社会影响以及UE生活方式的形成。我们还建议我们基于本研究结果进一步发展的渐进式UE参与和热情的时间框架,供运动心理学家使用和验证。