The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Osaka bares soul

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NEW York. — NAOMI OSAKA wrote an essay for Time in which she discussed the “key lessons” she has learned since saying publicly that she was prioritisi­ng her mental health.

The four-time Grand Slam champion wrote in the piece, which was published on Thursday, that her journey took “an unexpected path” and that she learned a lot after openly discussing her mental health.

“Lesson one: you can never please everyone,” Osaka wrote.

“The world is as divided now as I can remember in my short 23 years. Issues that are so obvious to me at face value, like wearing a mask in a pandemic or kneeling to show support for anti-racism, are ferociousl­y contested.”

“So, when I said I needed to miss French Open press conference­s to take care of myself mentally, I should have been prepared for what unfolded,” she added.

Osaka announced in May that she would not be doing any press at the French Open in order to protect her mental health. She later withdrew from the tournament entirely, and weeks later decided to pull out of Wimbledon as well.

The athlete discussed her struggles with mental health in a statement posted to her Instagram in late May, writing that she had suffered “long bouts of depression” since the US Open in 2018.

Many public figures commended her for her courage to openly discuss her mental health struggles and for demonstrat­ing the importance of exercising self-care.

“Proud of you,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted at the time.

Osaka received a number of messages from people sharing their own struggles with their mental health, she said in her Time essay.

“It has become apparent to me that literally everyone either suffers from issues related to their mental health or knows someone who does,” she wrote.

She made it clear that her comments about self-care were “never about the press” and that she had enjoyed an “amazing relationsh­ip with media.” However, she said she hoped the press conference format could be improved, perhaps to allow athletes the “right to take a mental break from media scrutiny on a rare occasion without being subject to strict sanctions”.

“In any other line of work, you would be forgiven for taking a personal day here and there, so long as it’s not habitual,” she said. — Time magazine.

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