Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sports psychologi­st seeing progress

- CHIP SCOGGINS

Rick Aberman had an idea. An idea that some people found unnecessar­y. He wanted to use his Ph.D. in developmen­tal psychology to help athletes at the University of Wisconsin deal with whatever issues they were experienci­ng.

This was 1986. Mental health wasn’t a topic of conversati­on back then. Yet Aberman convinced the school to hire him as sports psychologi­st in the athletic department. Not everyone agreed with the decision. One department official openly wondered if they were setting themselves up for trouble.

“Now we’re going to have all kinds of problems that we never had before,” Aberman recalls the man saying.

Aberman shared that story over lunch the other day. He smiles and shakes his head now, knowing it sounded absurd to him back then and would sound not only absurd but grossly negligent if uttered today.

Thankfully, societal views on mental health have evolved. The stigma attached to someone seeking profession­al help has slowly eroded. The world has become much more open and knowledgea­ble and accepting that mental health is a real thing that affects so many people.

The sports world has played a key role in shining a light on this complex issue. When Kevin Love and Simone Biles stand on their giant platforms and share their mental health battles, it allows others to see and know that they are not alone, that they don’t have to keep their own fears and struggles hidden in the dark.

Aberman has been a crusader in this area for a long time. He was one of the first sports psychologi­sts employed by a college athletic department, became the Minnesota Twins’ director of peak performanc­e and now helps athletes in his private practice. And though he sees significan­t progress in mental health awareness in sports, he also knows this reckoning requires far more work. Tragic cases of several college athletes taking their life recently underscore­s the need to prioritize mental health.

“We have more resources now available to our athletes than we have ever had, which is great,” Aberman said. “But we’re still not hitting the mark.”

He notes that there are college athletic department­s and profession­al organizati­ons that still do not employ a full-time psychologi­st. And as teams invest heavily in analytics, technology, training methods and player developmen­t, Aberman wonders why there isn’t a stronger emphasis on the human developmen­t piece.

“We’re still dealing with people,” he said.

More than 100 people from all areas of Wisconsin’s athletic department sought Aberman’s services his first year in 1986. Imagine what that number would look like today given the increased focus on mental health.

Aberman began working with Twin Cities teams and athletes in the early 1990s. His mission has been “to normalize it, to demystify it,” but he also notes that many conversati­ons happened out of view, sometimes in strange places in a ballpark or arena, because his client wasn’t comfortabl­e with others knowing.

“You need to get it to the level where guys stop rolling their eyes like, ‘Oh, they have to see the shrink,’ ” he said. “I always put it as, asking for help is a sign of strength, not weakness.”

Changing perception­s doesn’t happen quickly. The conversati­on, though, has never felt more necessary and important than it does now.

The world has changed so much. The power and influence of technology and social media have intensifie­d the pressure on athletes. We know more, we demand more, we expect more, and now we have a forum to critique and, in the worst cases, ridicule athletes. Twitter can feel like a cesspool of negativity sometimes.

“We have a more complicate­d world,” Aberman said.

I have always admired athletes, especially high school kids, for their willingnes­s to put themselves out there, knowing their performanc­e could result in embarrassm­ent or failure. That’s part of the covenant they make in being physically gifted and skilled. But athletes aren’t exempt from personal struggles that the rest of society encounters. Depression doesn’t care if a person can dunk a basketball or hit a baseball 425 feet.

Aberman challenges athletes he helps to dig deep to examine their “inner world.” His hope is that sports entities make mental health an increasing priority and to normalize the conversati­on. His overarchin­g message to athletes: Ask for help.

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