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29 | Paralympic Gold Medalist Alana Nichols: Embracing New Identities

The Injured Athletes Club

Release Date: 06/25/2020

173 | Swimmer Lyn Jutronich on Surviving a Shark Attack and Moving Forward show art 173 | Swimmer Lyn Jutronich on Surviving a Shark Attack and Moving Forward

The Injured Athletes Club

“ It's not going to be a linear journey, which is something that's been hard for me to wrap my head around. I have bad days and I have good days … I've had to learn that sometimes it's two steps forward, one step back.”   Lyn Jutronich has been swimming since she was a child in the Chicago suburbs, and as an adult living near San Diego, she fell in love with the open water. But in November 2022, she experienced every swimmer’s worst nightmare when a juvenile great white shark attacked her.   With help from her swimming partner, Lyn returned to shore. Her wounds healed in...

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172 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on Pain Management and Recovery show art 172 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on Pain Management and Recovery

The Injured Athletes Club

“I am nearly 8 months post-op after a femoral osteotomy to correct my knee. One of my biggest challenges is trying to figure out if my knee hurts because it ‘should’ as part of my recovery—or if it hurts because my body isn’t used to this level of training after 7 months of not doing much. Can you help?”—Aaron   Sometimes, pain sends a clear signal to your brain that there’s tissue damage or danger. But when you’re recovering from an injury, those messages can get muddled, with an overactivated central nervous system firing off warnings even though there’s nothing...

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171 | Author and Athlete Dimity McDowell on the 27th Mile and Charting a New Path Forward show art 171 | Author and Athlete Dimity McDowell on the 27th Mile and Charting a New Path Forward

The Injured Athletes Club

“ You don't want to think about a friend dying or going through a divorce or anything like that—you kind of don't want to even put that energy in the world. Same thing with running. You don't want to think about what it looks like, but the reality is, most of us are going to have to think about that. Not everyone can stand on the podium at age 70.”   Dimity McDowell was first on our back in 2022, when she’d just written a series of for (the late, great) Women’s Running magazine about what happens when you can’t run anymore.    As she describes in her return...

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170 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on When Grief and Gratitude Collide show art 170 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on When Grief and Gratitude Collide

The Injured Athletes Club

“ How do I cope with knowing that I may never get back to where I was—that this might be a permanent change for me?” —Emily   Many athletes—whether they’re professionals or amateurs—have a strong athletic identity. When that’s threatened by injury, especially if it’s a permanent shift, it’s normal to feel frightened and unmoored, Coach Carrie shares in this week’s listener Q&A episode.   Whether you have to give up your sport altogether or must adjust the way you participate, you should allow yourself to feel grief at the path you’re no longer taking....

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169 | Triathlete and Coach Angela Naeth on Creativity, Curiosity, and Compassion show art 169 | Triathlete and Coach Angela Naeth on Creativity, Curiosity, and Compassion

The Injured Athletes Club

“If I had to choose one injury or obstacle as the most difficult, it's really hard for me to do that because each one was very different in and of itself. I look back at them, and I'm honestly quite grateful I've been through it all, because it's changed who I am and it's made me who I am. You learn a lot when you're down and out.”   Angela Naeth has been racing as a pro triathlete since 2008, and added gravel racing in 2022. In that time, she’s had plenty of success, reaching the podium more than 40 times in 70.3 and Ironman events and placing in the top 8 at Ironman World...

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168 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Tell Yourself Something Worth Believing show art 168 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Tell Yourself Something Worth Believing

The Injured Athletes Club

“ My surgery was a success, and my doctors have given me the go-ahead to play again next season, but it's been over a decade since my initial injury, and I needed to hang up my skates. I've been sidelined for about 11 years.  I was always a really aggressive player, and I've never been one to shy away from a confrontational situation on the ice. But after my injury, I'm worried that I'll be too nervous to really dig in and go full throttle when it comes to checking or anything that brings me too close to the boards. I DESPERATELY want to play again, but I know myself well enough to...

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167 | Coach Carrie and Cindy Label Your Emotions show art 167 | Coach Carrie and Cindy Label Your Emotions

The Injured Athletes Club

“ When you take a moment to pause and label the emotion you're feeling, you're asking your prefrontal cortex to get involved, which pulls the activation out of the amygdala where your brain is processing threat or no threat. Instead of being overwhelmed by the physiological experience of the emotion. It creates psychological distance so you can experience it from a less threatening vantage point.”   Here at the Injured Athletes Club, we talk a lot about the roller coaster of emotions. Today, on this host-ful episode, Coach Carrie guides us through some of the ups and downs you’re...

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166 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Sustaining Motivation and Energy During Recovery show art 166 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question: Sustaining Motivation and Energy During Recovery

The Injured Athletes Club

“I just had my 12-week post-op follow-up with my doctor. It was a good appointment and things are pretty much where they are supposed to be at this stage. But I’ve been hitting a wall in my PT in terms of fatigue and overall enthusiasm. Most days, my energy is very low, and I’m trying to incorporate more rest and sleep in as much as possible.    The doctor said at this stage—between month 3 and 12—is where the real work begins in terms of strengthening and getting back to where I was before, and hopefully stronger. So I’m wondering if you have guidance on keeping...

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165 | Author and Athlete Chelsey Klein on Grace, Survival, and Letting Go show art 165 | Author and Athlete Chelsey Klein on Grace, Survival, and Letting Go

The Injured Athletes Club

“ I've had to learn how to ask for help. I am grateful for my independence. I'm grateful for the fact that if I want something, I go get it. And my work ethic—I work in sales and my success of being an athlete, I owe it to that. But at the end of the day, there is that understanding of there's a difference between giving up and surrendering.”   Chelsey Klein is a lifelong athlete—and no stranger to injury, which ended both her pursuit of gymnastics as a child and her collegiate volleyball career. But during the summer of 2020, during the height of the pandemic, she faced a...

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164 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on Balancing Healing and Life Goals show art 164 | Coach Carrie Answers a Question on Balancing Healing and Life Goals

The Injured Athletes Club

“ I’m feeling like my injury has really held me back in life. My first two years of college, I was trying to survive school while recovering from a car accident. I’ve needed every extension and have had many surgeries after that, which have affected my schooling and life in general. Now I’m ready to transfer from my community college to a university, and I don’t have all the right classes for the degree I’m going into. I feel like this injury has just ruined me, and I’m not sure what to do.” —Rylie   Injuries can be devastating at any stage and time. But in some cases,...

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Basketball, ski racing, sprint kayaking, surfing—Alana Nichols’ athletic career has brought her to the highest levels of a wide range of sports. Still, she tells us on this week’s show, as a Paralympian she often struggled to get the same care for her injuries as her able-bodied peers.

But fight she did, and her advocacy has carried over into her newer roles as president of the Women’s Sports Foundation and mother of baby Gunnar, who turns one year old in July (and whose dad is previous guest Roy Tuscany). For Alana, it all began when she came to terms with reality and set small goals. Eventually, they took her farther than she would have imagined, within sports and beyond them.

A huge thank you to Fluid Running H2GO, the only app-based deep-water running system in the world, for sponsoring this season of the Injured Athletes Club. CLICK HERE and use code IAC 30 to take $30 off the full system or the digital bundle.

In this episode, we discuss:

  • How injuries are viewed in Paralympic sports and the added obstacles adaptive athletes face (5:42)
  • How that connects to a bigger movement for access and equality (9:03)
  • The way her initial spinal cord injury influenced the way she coped with subsequent injuries (10:15)
  • How sports helped her through the process of adjusting to disability (13:38)
  • Becoming a new mom, and how that required her to readjust to her identity all over again (16:26)
  • Her last major injury, which led to her retirement from ski racing (19:18)
  • Vicarious trauma and how that factored into her life and decision to retire (28:47)
  • How lessons learned from injuries are helping her navigate the pandemic
  • Her work with the Women’s Sports Foundation, and the way it’s transformed her even as she’s aiming to transform the world (36:44)
  • The challenges women’s sports face in the wake of the pandemic and how they’re hoping to address them (42:15)

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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.