The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canadian ’keeper looks to share her experience­s via mindfulnes­s

- NEIL DAVIDSON THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canadian goalkeeper Erin McLeod is no stranger to beating herself up over mistakes made on the field.

But over the years, the 36year-old soccer star from St. Albert, Alta., has learned to better handle setbacks. She has drawn from coaches, sports psychologi­sts, her own experience­s and more than a few self-help books.

The result is the Mindful Project, a mindfulnes­s program developed in tandem with Bethel University professor Rachel Lindvall. The goal is to help focus more on positive thoughts while moving past negative ones.

“I’ve been playing soccer forever, literally,” McLeod said with a laugh. “And it’s just tools that I’ve learned along the way.

“I look back at my own career and I’ve been so hard on myself for so long. And I thought, ‘Well what if I never had to like unlearn?’ Because I’m finally enjoying the game a little bit more. I’m still hard on myself, but I’m laughing and enjoying it more and embracing mistakes and seeing them as growing opportunit­ies.

“And I thought, ‘What if I never had to reverse that process. What if I could just learn about myself, learn how my mind works?’ Mindfulnes­s is essentiall­y not judging the thoughts that come in and out of our minds, just accepting them.”

They started it with an eye to children aged six to 12, “so that they can get the most out of their mind and not have to move backwards once they reach adulthood,” McLeod explained.

It has since expanded to programs for sports clubs and adults, with the course having undergone refinement­s from test runs.

McLeod calls it a program “we hope will empower young people but also to give them the tools to deal with anxiety and depression and outside pressures ... (and) help them find who they are and have the strength to follow that.”

The Mindful Project McLeod has teamed up with Lindvall, an assistant women’s soccer coach and assistant professor of kinesiolog­y at Bethel University in Mishawaka, Ind., who is nearing the end of her doctorate in mindfulnes­s.

Lindvall and husband Jamie, who is head coach of the Bethel women’s team, often make soccer trips to Europe. One such journey to Germany led to dinner with McLeod and the issue of mindfulnes­s came up.

“So we kind of just started brainstorm­ing,” said McLeod. “And we started talking about when do we actually start catastroph­izing mistakes and when do we start learning to be hard on ourselves and when do we basically become — not to be dramatic — like prisoners of our own mind in certain things in life?”

It’s an area of particular interest for McLeod and not only for herself.

She is an ambassador for Canada Scores, a B.C. charity that provides vulnerable children with free after-school programmin­g combining soccer, poetry and community projects.

“I think as young people we focus so much on external things that it takes us a lot longer to focus on what’s happening on the inside,” said McLeod. “And the anxiety and depression rates for young people is just skyrocketi­ng.

“This program really is just about finding who you are and the beauty and uniqueness that we all have and to embrace it.” McLeod is a renaissanc­e woman — an artist, musician and entreprene­ur away from the soccer field as well as an LGBT representa­tive on the Canadian Olympic Committee’s Athletes’ Commission. She has won 118 caps for Canada, with 45 clean sheets, and played profession­ally in North America, Germany and Sweden.

She has also joined Manchester United’s Juan Mata, U.S. internatio­nal Alex Morgan and other soccer stars in digging into their pockets to help others. They have signed on with Common Goal, pledging one per cent of their salary to a central fund which is distribute­d to soccer-based charities around the world.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Canada’s Erin McLeod, pictured, has developed a mindfulnes­s program with Bethel University professor Rachel Lindvall.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Canada’s Erin McLeod, pictured, has developed a mindfulnes­s program with Bethel University professor Rachel Lindvall.

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