The Mercury News

Mental health

-

there,” Biles said of the impact her decision made on others.

Michael Phelps, retired swimmer and winner of a record 23 gold medals, said the day after Biles walked off the floor in Tokyo that the gymnast had shown “it is OK not to be OK.” Phelps has long been public about his own mental health struggles — including acknowledg­ing he contemplat­ed suicide after the 2012 Olympics — but Biles blew the discussion wide open.

Athletes over the last few years had started to publicly address anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts they experience­d. But heightened by the strains of the pandemic and the support shown to both Biles and Osaka, the toughest of the tough are no longer “shaking it off,” or any of the cliché things athletes are supposed to do.

In the last three months:

• Atlanta Falcons receiver Calvin Ridley stepped away from the game in October to “focus on my mental wellbeing,” he wrote on social media. “This will help me be the best version of myself now and in the future.”

• Tennessee Titans receiver A.J. Brown shared a video on the one-year anniversar­y of the day he considered suicide to deal with depression he was battling during a breakout 2020 Pro Bowl season. “I just wanted to put out a positive message that I’m still here. I’m still growing. I’m still learning.”

• Philadelph­ia Eagles left tackle Lane Johnson missed three games to address depression and anxiety. “I was living in hell for a long time. Don’t bottle it up. And it’s easy to do that. It’s easy to avoid the situations that you don’t want to go through.”

• Bianca Andreescu, the 2019 U.S. Open champion, said she would take a mental break from tennis and sit out the start of next season to “re-set, recover, and grow” after a challengin­g two years that included contractin­g COVID-19. “I could not detach myself from everything that was going on off the court; was feeling the collective sadness and turmoil around and it took its toll on me,” the 21-year-old Canadian wrote on social media.

• Formula One driver Valtteri Bottas broke from his normal private nature on a podcast to discuss mental health struggles that nearly caused him to quit racing. Bottas called the podcast “therapeuti­c” and said he did it for fans in his native Finland because “normally I haven’t shared much underneath the skin ... I think they have a right to know me a bit better as a human being.”

Greg Miller, a licensed profession­al counselor for Thrivework­s in Cherry Hill, N.J., noted the focus on mental health is not entirely new and previously was championed by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. He also pointed to Royce White, who talked openly of his struggles while playing basketball at Iowa State but as an NBA rookie in 2012 refused to play because the league lacked a comprehens­ive mental health program. Royce was, according to Miller, a “canary in the coal mine” nearly a decade ahead of his time.

While Biles and Osaka helped blow the conversati­on open, Miller believes stigmas surroundin­g mental health won’t go away. Athletes, particular­ly male ones from traditiona­l sports championed in the fabric of America, will still struggle

to seek help when needed.

“We’re taught as men to be individual­s who take care of things with grit and resilience, not community and vulnerabil­ity,” Miller said. “There are pockets of people in the country who see individual­s talking about their feelings as weak or lacking masculinit­y in general. What you’re seeing playing out among male athletes now is nothing new to any man who has ever dealt with mental health issues; it has been happening to men across the country for generation­s.

“We, as a collective society, need to take a look at ourselves and decide whether an open conversati­on about mental health is strength-based or not. Until that happens, male athletes — and men as a whole — will continue to experience difficulty discussing mental health challenges.”

The NBA has a “Mind Health” program and the NFL and NFL Players Associatio­n in 2019 formed a mental health and wellness committee. Minnesota Vikings general manager Rick Spielman earlier this month urged organizati­ons to invest in support systems following an incident in which defensive end Everson Griffen called police to his home and then refused to leave; Griffen has since revealed he’s bipolar.

Most leagues do indeed now have robust mental health and counseling services.

Nearly six months removed from her own public dealings with mental health struggles, Biles said, “I’m honestly kind of OK that it happened” because it led to her receiving the help she didn’t recognize she needed. Had it not all come to a head on a gymnastics mat in Tokyo, her trauma would have followed her.

“Your mind and body will stop before you do. My mind and body were intact with everything that I was feeling, and it was very alarming,” she said. “It told me like, ‘Hey, enough is enough, you’ve got to go get help.’ I would have probably kept suppressin­g it for probably the rest of my life.”

 ?? ??
 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Calvin Ridley, top, and offensive tackle Lance Johnson of the Philadelph­ia Eagles have taken leaves of absence from their teams. Once-taboo topics such as battles with anxiety, depression or addictive behaviors are no longer suppressed and athletes around the world are speaking up.
AP FILE PHOTOS Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Calvin Ridley, top, and offensive tackle Lance Johnson of the Philadelph­ia Eagles have taken leaves of absence from their teams. Once-taboo topics such as battles with anxiety, depression or addictive behaviors are no longer suppressed and athletes around the world are speaking up.
 ?? ?? Andreescu
Andreescu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States