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12 | Former Gymnast and Mental Performance Consultant Angie Fifer: Another Door Opens

The Injured Athletes Club

Release Date: 02/27/2020

122 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Reese’s Roller Coaster show art 122 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Reese’s Roller Coaster

The Injured Athletes Club

“I am a cyclist. I have had multiple surgeries for an injury that occurred 2.5 years ago. Things are going downhill again, and it looks like I’m going to be faced with a third major surgery. If I do have this surgery, there is a good chance I will not be able to ride a bike again, even recreationally. I am completely heartbroken. I remember the beginning of this journey when I thought 6 weeks non-weight bearing and 6 months to recovery sounded insurmountable. I can’t believe that I’m still here and still in pain. I feel like I’m drowning and I need help navigating what is becoming a...

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121 | Football Player and Entrepreneur Will Bartholomew: The Gift of Perseverance show art 121 | Football Player and Entrepreneur Will Bartholomew: The Gift of Perseverance

The Injured Athletes Club

“Injuries, you can use them as opportunities to go do something great. I feel like that was ingrained in me early on in my life. I look back now and I'm very fortunate for having those injuries because they set me up for some great things.”   This week, Coach Carrie and Cindy chat with Will Bartholomew, founder and CEO of D1 Training. Will shares his journey from being a promising football player who faced career-altering injuries to the founder of a successful nationwide network of athletic training facilities.    Will discusses the significant moments in his athletic...

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120 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Emily’s Emotions show art 120 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Emily’s Emotions

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How can you deal with anxiety not of a specific reinjury, but a more generalized fear about your sport being taken away from you again? That fear does help me appreciate what I have now that I'm running again, but also makes disruptions to my training or race plans—whether from how I'm feeling physically, or work/life stress—harder to deal with. How can I cope?”   In this episode of The Injured Athletes Club podcast, mental skills coach Carrie Jackson answers a question from Emily regarding handling the anxiety associated with the potential permanent loss of her sport due to...

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119 | Ultrarunner Aum Gandhi: Your Inner Coach show art 119 | Ultrarunner Aum Gandhi: Your Inner Coach

The Injured Athletes Club

“Instead of being mean to myself and saying, ‘You’ve got nothing else outside of running,’ I said, ‘Look at all the other multi-faceted things you are. You are a son, you are a brother, you're a business owner. Humans are multi-faceted; you have an identity outside this sport. The sport may have helped you find more of your authenticity, but you're not bound to this sport. It's only a piece of the puzzle, a part of your identity.”   When Merrell Professional Athlete Aum Gandhi first started running six years ago, he barely went a quarter of a mile—and he describes it now as...

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118 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Cecile’s Situation show art 118 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Cecile’s Situation

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How can you let go of the injury? Sometimes when you spend a long time with a chronic injury, it shapes how you move, plan, and think about life and your body. How do you let go when the time has come?”   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, Coach Carrie delves into the complex issue posed by listener Cecile on letting go of the identity formed around a chronic injury. She points out how this attachment can make the...

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117 | Strongwoman and Author Alyssa Ages: Learning through Failure show art 117 | Strongwoman and Author Alyssa Ages: Learning through Failure

The Injured Athletes Club

“Because I wasn't a competitive runner, I don't think I ever had to face failure in that situation … but in strength sports, when I compete, I'm doing that in front of a crowd and a judge who is just looking at me. And it's totally changed the way that I have to handle that fear of failure because it's right there in front of me. I can't escape that someone is looking directly at me and judging whether I've passed or failed. And what I've learned from that is just that it makes you, I think, a better person when you face failure in that way.”   On this week’s episode of The...

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116 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Cassandra’s Cocoon show art 116 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Cassandra’s Cocoon

The Injured Athletes Club

“ As someone in long-term recovery, likely 12 to 18 months before I'm running again, I've struggled a lot with the muscle loss and atrophy to the point it's causing identity struggles. I don't look or feel like an athlete anymore. My coach and I will have to literally rebuild my strength and my body. How can I cope?”  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, listener Cassandra is struggling with losing her athletic identity. Coach...

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115 | Former NCAA Basketball Player Britt Hunter: Pour Into Others show art 115 | Former NCAA Basketball Player Britt Hunter: Pour Into Others

The Injured Athletes Club

“You need to equip your young adult for how to get through it on their own. So shepherd them. Get them the tools and resources. Let them mess it up a little bit. It's natural to protect, protect, protect, and direct, direct, direct—but your child needs to explore this time on their own a little bit with the right resources and the right people around them. They're going to go through this again and again and again at different stages of their life and going through an injury at a young age, they're going to have to grow up a little bit faster. So help them, but don't control them.”...

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114 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jennifer’s Junction show art 114 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Jennifer’s Junction

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How do I walk the fine line between being independent and self-reliant in recovery—a positive—and opting to go it alone, which can be a negative? Separately, I’d love to know more about managing an injury in the context of a chronic condition. For example, I have epilepsy but seizure meds are not great for bone density. Flip side, reducing meds is good for bones but bad for the brain. Doctors can offer guidance but making the decisions is ours alone.”   In the seventh season of The Injured Athletes Club podcast, mental skills coach Carrie Jackson answers a question every...

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113 | Ultrarunner Amelia Boone: The Best Days Are Ahead show art 113 | Ultrarunner Amelia Boone: The Best Days Are Ahead

The Injured Athletes Club

“I would tell [Amelia of four years ago] that you may not believe it, but it's gonna get better, and recovery is possible, and honestly, your best running days are to come. And that's something that I've had to tell myself now too. I actually still do believe that, especially as we're seeing women in their 40s just blossoming in distance running.”   In this episode of the Injured Athletes Club, Coach Carrie and Cindy are grateful to catch up with our first guest ever—and first repeat guest—elite ultrarunner, championship obstacle course racer, and eating disorder advocate Amelia...

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Angie Fifer first enrolled at Penn State with a plan to become an athletic trainer. But during a class in sport psychology, she felt a tear roll down her cheek. Instantly, she knew she’d found her calling—to prevent other athletes from having the same experience she had.

When she was 16 and an aspiring gymnast, a serious fall on the uneven bars sent her to the hospital and threatened her future in the sport. (Just a heads-up to listeners, she describes the incident in a bit of detail around the 9:56 mark.)

The broken bones and stitches weren’t the worst part. Far more challenging was the transition from invincible to fragile in others’ eyes. Despite supportive parents and teammates, she still felt isolated and depressed without psychological help for the trauma.

On this week’s Injured Athletes Club, Angie shares more about this experience, as well as her transition to endurance sports and her work helping athletes and others “be their best a little bit more often.” We discuss:

  • How injuries are viewed in gymnastics, and how it’s sometimes hard for young athletes to take the long view (5:40)
  • Why gymnasts sometimes fear coming forward with injuries (8:55)
  • The big injury that changed the trajectory of her athletic career, and her life (9:56)
  • The biggest regret she has about that experience (18:55)
  • When it became clear she’d never compete again (22:57)
  • How she found her athletic fire again as an adult (30:35)
  • What happened when she got injured as a runner, and how different the experience was (33:45)
  • The most common emotions she sees in the injured athletes she works with (38:15)
  • How visualization can boost confidence and ease fears of re-injury (40:26)
  • Her biggest advice to coaches (45:13)

 

Resources/links:

You can subscribe to The Injured Athletes Club on Stitcher, Apple Podcasts, Google Play, and now, on Spotify! 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.