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10 | Runner and Writer Jen A. Miller on Trusting Yourself

The Injured Athletes Club

Release Date: 01/23/2020

132 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Bec’s Rebound show art 132 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Bec’s Rebound

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How does one find self-compassion when you’ve been through this too many times and understand the importance of the beginning phase while also itching to get out of it and back to the activities that bring me joy?   I know all the usual tactics: time with friends, using other activities (music, podcast, drawing), resting, lifting upper body and moving in whatever way I can that doesn’t jeopardize the surgical area, reframing, CBT, DBT, etc. But I still feel a bit lost.” —Bec   It’s our very last episode of the season—and a fitting Q&A to end on, as Coach Carrie...

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131 | Coach Carrie Answers (More of) Your Questions on Recovery, Cross-Training, and Moving On show art 131 | Coach Carrie Answers (More of) Your Questions on Recovery, Cross-Training, and Moving On

The Injured Athletes Club

“If one already has a good physical therapist, what are the benefits of a personal trainer when recovering from an injury or surgery? Is it just more money or can a personal trainer actually be a value add?”   “How do you balance being smart about prevention without letting worry of re-injury consume you?”   “What is the best way to recover from a VERY torturous PT session? Mental and physical. Also, more info on using blood flow restriction for recovery.”   “How can I trust that my crosstraining really works? And how can I let go of the fear of not recovering? I...

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130 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Marion’s Misgivings show art 130 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Marion’s Misgivings

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How to deal with re-injury? I tore my ACL last winter and it almost broke me, but I fought my way back into skiing at almost my previous level this year. Now I just tore it again and I feel absolutely shattered. I wasn’t out of control or falling - the turn was just too much for my knee to handle and it snapped. I have no idea how I’ll ever feel confident enough to take up skiing in the future now this happened. Also, I’m feeling completely demotivated for my recovery this time around.” —Marion   In the seventh season of The Injured Athletes Club podcast, mental skills...

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129 | Triathlete and Family Physician Alex McDonald: Advocating for Yourself as an Athlete show art 129 | Triathlete and Family Physician Alex McDonald: Advocating for Yourself as an Athlete

The Injured Athletes Club

“Injury was horrible and I wouldn't wish it on anyone, but I think again, that shaped me and that helped me become a better physician today because of those experiences. I wouldn't trade that experience for anything. It's part of who I am and has made me who I am today.”   Alex McDonald was in medical school when he tried a triathlon with a friend, just for fun. But he quickly excelled at the sport, and eventually decided to take a break between medical school and his residency to pursue it at a high level.  He had some success, but heading into his final season, he went out on a...

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128 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jessica’s Juncture show art 128 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jessica’s Juncture

The Injured Athletes Club

"How do you develop a bank of confidence for the future without comparing to past achievements?"   In this Q&A episode of The Injured Athletes Club podcast, mental skills coach Carrie Jackson tackles a crucial question from listener Jessica about confidence.    In her response, Coach Carrie emphasizes the importance of redefining goals, focusing on the present moment, and celebrating small victories. She explains how deliberately setting rehabilitation targets can help injured athletes shift their focus to what's within their control and redefine success. By letting go of...

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127 | Skier and Non-Profit Founder Kelly Brush: Lessons in Resilience show art 127 | Skier and Non-Profit Founder Kelly Brush: Lessons in Resilience

The Injured Athletes Club

“All of a sudden, I had two-thirds of my body that weren't working anymore. I had to figure out how to live my life and how to move my body around, who I was and what I was going do with my life in a way that was, I thought at the time, completely changed. Now, I don't think I'm completely changed. I think I'm exactly the same person. I just do things a little bit differently.”   Kelly Brush grew up in a family of skiers, excelled on the slopes from childhood, and eventually achieved her dream of skiing in college at Middlebury College. But during her sophomore year, when she was...

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126 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Rachel’s Resentfulness show art 126 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Rachel’s Resentfulness

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How do you manage the jealousy towards non-injured athletes while dealing with your own injury?”   In the seventh season of The Injured Athletes Club podcast, mental skills coach Carrie Jackson answers a question every other week about the mental side of overcoming injuries.    This week, athlete Rachel voices what so many other injured athletes feel—wondering how to cope with the feeling of loss and jealousy when she sees others doing the sport she’s missing.   Coach Carrie acknowledges that feeling this way toward healthy athletes is normal during recovery....

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125 | Coach Carrie and Cindy Help You Through a Setback show art 125 | Coach Carrie and Cindy Help You Through a Setback

The Injured Athletes Club

“Setbacks are a very common part of injury recovery. I don't know if it's ever happened where someone heals with a perfect upward trajectory. I'm going to, I'm going to go ahead and say, it's very rare that that happens. This is why we talk so much about resilience and hardiness and the bounce that comes with a rebound.”   Almost every injured athlete knows the feeling. You’re sticking to your plan, dedicated to your rehab, and certain that you’ll be back to 100 percent in the time the doctor outlined. Then, it happens—a new wrinkle to the injury, another procedure required, a...

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124 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jessica’s Journey show art 124 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jessica’s Journey

The Injured Athletes Club

“ I thought I was done with this group. I had surgery in 2021 to repair a torn labrum in my hip and I was doing better. Then 6 months after surgery, I was given the green light to go jogging 2 blocks and I’ve been in hamstring pain since then.   How do you move past the back-to-back chronic injuries? How do I work out when I’m afraid anything will hurt me? How do I physically and emotionally heal from this 7-year injury journey?”   We always say, “We’re sorry you’re here, but we’re glad you’re with us”—and when we (Coach Carrie and Cindy) heard this week’s...

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123 | Personal Trainer John Petrelli: Grateful Every Day show art 123 | Personal Trainer John Petrelli: Grateful Every Day

The Injured Athletes Club

“If this was 20-year-old, John Petrelli, I probably wouldn't have the positive mindset to navigate those waters. I would have probably been going, why is this happening to me? Being fearful, having shame, being angry. But because so many people had come into my life as a mentor and shared their gift of knowledge, their love, their compassion on me … I said, how do I possibly make something positive happen out of this that may impact other people?”   For 30 years, John Petrelli’s work as a personal trainer has relied on him being physically capable. So it came as a shock when,...

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More Episodes

Jen A. Miller has been writing about running for The New York Times since 2010. The first article on the sport she published there had to do with injury—"dead butt syndrome," specifically.

Last year, she sustained another serious setback, a stress fracture in her tibia. In the weekly running newsletter she now writes for the Times, she chronicled her journey, from the anger and frustration at her diagnosis to an emotional comeback, running the New York City Marathon with her mother.

On the Injured Athletes Club podcast this week, Jen—who’s also the author of a memoir, Running: A Love Story—joined us to share:

  • How she thinks injuries are viewed in running: “inevitable and terrible” (5:10)
  • More about her dead butt syndrome, how she coped, and how it ultimately propelled her career forward (6:28)
  • One tool she’s found incredibly helpful in staying healthy (8:29)
  • More about what contributed to her stress fracture (9:05)
  • What it was like to write about injury in such a public way (12:08)
  • The emotions that most surprised her along the way (14:58)
  • The process of returning to running, and helping her mother train for and race her first marathon (22:36)
  • Her experience tapering off antidepressants, and how running played a role in the transition (28:36)
  • The challenges athletes sometimes face in communicating with health care providers (35:51)
  • The biggest lessons she’s taken from her injury experience and the changes to her running she’s made because of it (42:01)

 

Resources/links:

 

You can subscribe to The Injured Athletes Club on Stitcher, Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts, and if you like what you hear, please leave us a rating or a review in Apple podcasts. That helps other injured athletes find the show.

 

To access more resources for injured athletes:

 

DISCLAIMER: This content is for educational & informational use only and & does not constitute medical advice. Do not disregard, avoid or delay obtaining medical or health related advice from your health-care professional because of something you may have heard in an episode of this podcast. You should not rely on this information as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please consult with a qualified medical professional for proper evaluation & treatment. Guests who speak on this podcast express their own opinions, experiences, and conclusions, and The Injured Athletes Club podcast hosts nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular treatment option discussed in the episodes of this podcast and are not responsible for any actions or inactions of listeners based on the information presented. The use of any information provided is solely at your own risk.