This article was originally published as part of the IWLCA "Behind the Whistle" blog series. It is reprinted with permission.
If I showed you my broken arm and said “I’m injured,” you wouldn't say to me, “you’re fine,” “suck it up,” or “shake it off.” You would say, “how can I help you make this better?” or ask, “How can I help you heal?” And if I said to you “I feel anxious,” “I feel depressed,” “I’m stressed,” or “I’m nervous,” you shouldn’t tell me to “shake it off,” or to deny those feelings either. Our minds and our bodies are one and the same. The difference is that a physical injury can be seen, and our mental health is invisible.
There is an urgent need in the sports world, and in our world in general, to talk about our mental health. To talk about the thing we all have, our minds.
Throughout my collegiate career, this need grew. Playing a sport in college was tough. A lot of the time it felt like constant anxiety and pressure to be perfect in every way and it felt like we were missing something to try and navigate those feelings. I watched myself, my teammates, and peers struggle alone to understand how we were feeling, trying to navigate telling our coaches that we didn’t feel right, that something was wrong, scared of looking weak in their eyes, of losing playing time, of being treated differently by our teammates. The stigma of talking about mental health became an overwhelming barrier to feeling healthy and performing at the highest level.
These conversations have been going on for some time, this need has always been there, but those conversations ended in the locker room.
We saw what other schools were doing to tackle the stigma against mental health and what tools they were providing to their student-athletes in order to promote positive coping skills. In response to this need, a fellow student athlete and I, along with our academic advisor, started SHAPE (Student Health Allies and Peer Educators) at Marquette. The goal of SHAPE is to help athletes know they are not alone, to connect them to mental health resources on campus, to recognize the signs of mental crisis, and to help our peers recognizes the signs as well. We knew we wanted SHAPE to be peer lead because our teammates and peers are usually the first ones who hear about or recognize when something is not right.