During the women鈥檚 downhill race on Wednesday, Bode Miller, who has been an NBC color commentator for the alpine ski events at this Olympics, offered some insight on the mental toll of his former profession.
鈥淓veryone says that the pitcher鈥檚 mound is the loneliest place in sports. I would say the Olympic start gate is the loneliest place,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淵ou have hundreds of millions of people focused on you. There鈥檚 no one who can help you. You鈥檙e alone at that point. You鈥檙e fully exposed.鈥
Such is the psychological weight of competing in the Games that even stone-cold killers like Mikaela Shiffrin aren鈥檛 unaffected. The 22-year-old two-time gold medalist confessed to before the first run of her slalom race last Friday. Granted, with the exception perhaps of Austria鈥檚 Marcel Hirscher, Shiffrin has had more pressure on her than any other athlete in Pyeongchang.
How does she deal? We asked a few sports psychologists for their tips on performing in such a high-stress environment.
Remember: The Past Is Dead and the Future Is Uncertain
鈥淧ressure in itself usually doesn鈥檛 exist in the moment, if that makes sense. If you鈥檙e thinking, 鈥榃hat if I crash? What if I don鈥檛 do well? What if I make a mistake?鈥欌攁ll those what-ifs bring your mind into the future, into hypothetical situations that have not occurred yet. Or, as was the case with Aksel Svindal who in Beaver Creek and then , you can be like, 鈥極h, this is where I crashed.鈥 Then your mind is in the past. In both cases, the pressure is coming from somewhere that鈥檚 not here in the moment. I work with my athletes to be present, to take a deep breath and ground themselves and simplify their focus so they don鈥檛 find themselves overanalyzing. They cue their body in the most simple of ways to do what they know how to do聽instead of standing in their own way.鈥
鈥擲tephanie Zavilla, director of sports performance at
Curse at Self-Doubt
鈥淧hysiologically, our bodies like to respond to Olympic moments as if we are in danger. This is much like how your body responds when you watch a scary movie. You might calm yourself down by telling yourself, 鈥業t鈥檚 just a movie.鈥 Well, athletes also remind themselves that they aren鈥檛 in danger by altering their outlook about the pressure, focusing attention on the strengths they have implemented to achieve high-level performance and talking, or even cursing, at the self-doubt. The athletes who tend to run into performance problems are the ones who don鈥檛 hold themselves accountable to any sort of positive action, and instead go through the motions of a performance, with their body out there competing but their mind disconnected鈥攁s if they are watching themselves compete and hanging back to see what the result might be.鈥
鈥, sports psychologist for the U.S. Figure Skating Team at the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Games
Accept What You Can鈥檛 Control
鈥淎thletes sometimes get themselves into trouble by thinking they can鈥檛 be anxious or experience that thought, whatever that thought is. They might know the things that they should be saying to themselves, and yet it鈥檚 not always that easy鈥hen an athlete has just had either a good or a less impressive performance, it鈥檚 easy to get stuck on what just happened. And yet, when we are able to categorize what just happened as an uncontrollable and concentrate on the task at hand, which is much more controllable, then it鈥檚 easier to perform.鈥
鈥, licensed clinical professional counselor
Think Like a Samurai (But Remember You鈥檙e Not a Samurai)
鈥淎 really big transformation I try to help athletes make is to realize that the sport they鈥檙e playing is not who they are鈥攊t鈥檚 what they do. Sometimes that helps them deal with a very deep level of pressure, because they have this monumental fear of failure. But, to me, mental training is also about making peace with and even working through all of your ultimate fears. If you鈥檙e consciously trying to avoid failure, you鈥檝e already lost, because you鈥檙e not going all in. So you have to make peace with the possibility of failure. Some of the concepts I talk to athletes about are like samurai training. Samurais were doing sports psychology and mental training way before this even existed. With the samurai, unlike an Olympian, their life was on the line. A samurai has a bad day and they鈥檙e not coming home. They had to make peace with their ultimate fear, which was losing their life. If they made peace with that, they could let their sword do what it was trained to do.鈥
鈥, co-founder of and co-creator of , a mental training app
Enjoy the Experience
鈥淚 think the pressure to make the Olympic team can be just as significant, and in some cases more significant, than actually being at the Olympics themselves. There really is something special about saying, 鈥業 was an Olympian.鈥 Most kids who are training for the Olympics, their goal is to make the team. Their goal is not to win a medal. If you go back to the opening ceremonies and remember all those athletes who came in鈥攎ost of them are just glad to be there. The media doesn鈥檛 want to tell that story because it鈥檚 not interesting in the moment. After you make the team, you could actually argue that, for a lot of kids, there鈥檚 a release. It鈥檚 like, 鈥業 did it, I made the team.鈥 Medaling, then, that鈥檚 all just gravy.鈥
鈥, sport psychology consultant and author of