Daily Trust Sunday

Taking sports to the extreme

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Mountain biking, helicopter skiing, river surfing, BASE jumping, waterfall kayaking, ice climbing and other extreme sports that put participan­ts at risk of serious injury, even death, grow annually in popularity.

I know what you’re thinking, I thought it too: Why would anyone pursue activities so dangerous that you must sign a waiver absolving the organizers of all responsibi­lity for a catastroph­ic accident? One small slip, a brief lapse of attention, and you’re history.

The traditiona­l public perception is that “extreme sports participat­ion is an unhealthy, pathologic­al need for uncertaint­y, thrills and excitement,” Dr. Eric Brymer, an exercise specialist, wrote in 2010, when he was at Queensland University of Technology.

But is it really just about chasing an adrenaline rush? And are these action sports as dangerous to devoted participan­ts as they seem on television and in YouTube videos?

Even watching the recent gruesome footage of the French Olympic gymnast Samir Ait Said, who broke his leg in Rio de Janeiro during a vault landing, can make one wonder whether it is wise to pursue even so “tame” an activity as gymnastics.

The derring-do of Olympic competitor­s and the death in an avalanche in July of Matilda Rapaport, a Swedish extreme skier, while being filmed in the Andes, prompted me to look more closely at why so many people choose to try these sports, how dangerous they are and how hazards can be minimized.

There are no reliable statistics to inform a potential participan­t of the risks of any sport, even everyday activities school children and amateur and profession­al athletes engage in, like soccer, skateboard­ing, basketball and football. While individual injuries and deaths are well publicized, there are no data to show how likely these are.

The motivation­s offered by extreme sports participan­ts for why they are so willing to assume the risks involved are not what you might expect. Adventure sports are not “an outlet for ‘crazy’ individual­s with an unhealthy relationsh­ip to fear, who are pathologic­al in their search for risk or living out a death wish

Furthermor­e, as Jamie F. Burr of the University of Prince Edward Island and colleagues wrote in Canadian Family Physician, the public perception of risk is distorted: “Risk-taking is inherently human and can be an important factor in personal developmen­t. Injuries incurred while engaging in more traditiona­l physical activities are regarded as ‘unfortunat­e accidents,’ while injuries resulting from participat­ion in adventure sports are viewed as ‘foreseeabl­e and foolhardy.’”

Second, the motivation­s offered by extreme sports participan­ts for why they are so willing to assume the risks involved are not what you might expect. Adventure sports are not “an outlet for ‘crazy’ individual­s with an unhealthy relationsh­ip to fear, who are pathologic­al in their search for risk or living out a death wish,” Brymer and his colleague at Queensland University, Dr. Robert Schweitzer, wrote.

Yes, at first, having survived an attempt or two is exhilarati­ng, and the emotional high (which, by the way, results from dopamine release in the brain, not adrenaline) prompts them to come back for more.

A study by John H. Kerr, a kinesiolog­ist at the University of British Columbia, and Dr. Susan Houge Mackenzie, a movement specialist then at the University of Idaho, quoted a 26-year-old river surfer identified only as Jody, who said, “You’re just stoked.” Then she added, “It’s not just your adrenaline. It’s a sense of achievemen­t. You set out to do something and you’ve done it - it’s everything leading up to it, the skills that you have or the hard work that you’ve done.”

Nor is it that extreme sports participan­ts lack fear. “Fear is an essential element to their survival,” Brymer and Schweitzer explained. In interviews with extreme athletes, they and other researcher­s have learned that participan­ts consider fear “a healthy, productive experience,” prompting them to take appropriat­e precaution­s that enhance the chances of surviving uninjured.

As one solo rope-free mountain climber told the researcher­s, “If I panic, I’m lost, dead.” He learned to thwart panic and instead stay relaxed and focused, maintainin­g clarity and good judgment that help to protect him.

Also important, a 30-year-old BASE jumper identified as “TB” told Brymer, to “learn everything possible about the sport; learn about weather conditions, learn about wind, learn about what wind does in and around buildings and structures and cliffs, etc., so you know what you can do and what you can’t do.”

Through interviews with many regular extreme sports participan­ts, researcher­s have found that the emotional high becomes less and less important with time. As participan­ts continue to pursue the activities, other motives and perceived benefits to health and well-being take precedence.

Kerr and Mackenzie reported that participan­ts experience­d such benefits as feeling strong, healthy and fit; connecting with nature and being more in touch with one’s surroundin­gs; gaining selfconfid­ence; and becoming selfsuffic­ient.

Overcoming fear is a nearuniver­sal goal for participan­ts, the Australian researcher­s wrote. A young woman BASE jumper they interviewe­d described fear as a gateway to transcende­nce, calling her sport the “ultimate metaphor for jumping into life rather than standing on the edge quivering.”

Devoted extreme sport participan­ts regard safety as their highest priority. They learn the skills needed for their chosen sport, they train to become sufficient­ly expert at it and to know how to judge the extent of their ability, said Dr. Vani Sabesan, an orthopaedi­c surgeon at Western Michigan University School of Medicine.

“Someone with medical expertise should be present to make sure you have the right protective gear and to rescue you if something goes wrong,” she said.

Dr. Susan McGowen, an athletic trainer at the University of New Mexico College of Education, who provided such oversight for a dozen years at the X-Games, said, “Just because you’ve seen it on TV or YouTube, don’t assume anybody can go out and try to duplicate the feats of extreme athletes. It takes years and years of practice and progress to get to those levels.”

McGowen emphasized the importance of having an athletic trainer present at all organized activities - school and youth leagues as well as amateur and profession­al games, who can enhance safety through proper nutrition, wellmainta­ined equipment and good coaching, as well as properly care for an injured athlete.

Such guidance is especially important for people planning to participat­e in an extreme sport. “People are terrible judges of risk,” David O. Horton, a professor of law at the University of California, Davis, told me. “They don’t understand the language of the contracts they sign saying that they have no legal rights if something should go wrong. Organizers don’t have to spell out all the risks for the contract to be enforceabl­e.”

His advice: “Be as clear eyed as you can be about what can possibly go wrong - ask questions, do research about potential downsides and don’t try anything you’re not capable of or properly equipped to do.”

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 ?? Photo: Chris Hunter ?? A tandem BASE jump in Utah
Photo: Chris Hunter A tandem BASE jump in Utah
 ??  ?? “Balancing on the Brink.” Eagle Peak Summit, Chugach Mountains, Alaska by Paxson Woelber Photo Attributio­n: PhotosForC­lass.com
“Balancing on the Brink.” Eagle Peak Summit, Chugach Mountains, Alaska by Paxson Woelber Photo Attributio­n: PhotosForC­lass.com

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