Lydia Jacoby was a breakout star in the pool for the United States at the last Summer Games, earning a gold medal in the 100-meter breaststroke and a relay silver. Part of what comes to mind from those heady days in Tokyo? āPeople talking about post-Olympic depression,ā she said.
She was 17 at the time, and her initial response when other athletes brought up the topic was: āWell, that doesnāt apply to me.ā
Recommended Videos
āI essentially did not understand the topic of depression,ā she said. āIt wasnāt until after the Games that I was like, āOh. ... OK. Yeah, Iām feeling this a little.āā
Jacoby, who didn't qualify for the 2024 Olympics, is now fully aware of the phenomenon, went through it, moved past it and discusses it casually, all of which points to the way things have changed in just a few years when it comes to mental health.
As the Paris Games open on Friday, followed by the Paralympics beginning Aug. 28, athletes have more access than ever to resources in that once-taboo realm and sound more willing than ever to use them. That seems particularly significant given that Jessica Bartley, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee's senior director of psychological services, says about half of the country's athletes at the past two Olympiads were flagged for at least one of the following: anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, eating disorders, substance use or abuse.
āWe really are just a part of the conversation now,ā Bartley said, āand not an afterthought or something when someoneās struggling.ā
Among the key questions now: Is everyone going to seek the help they need? And is enough help available?
As for the first, Bartley said: "Iād like to think weāre over the hump, but weāre still not quite there. I feel like there is still some stigma. I think thereās still some connections to āweakness.āā
And the second? āI do think there still could be more,ā track star Gabby Thomas said, ābut, I mean, theyāre there.ā
Olympians Simone Biles, Naomi Osaka and Michael Phelps opened doors
Three Olympians ā Simone Biles and Naomi Osaka, who participated in the last pandemic-delayed Summer Games, and are returning, and retired swimmer Michael Phelps, who has more medals than anyone in any sport ā provided some of the loudest voices in the growing global conversation in sports and society at large about the importance of protecting, gauging and improving the state of oneās mind as much as oneās body.
Phelps spoke about having suicidal thoughts at the height of his career and helped produce a documentary about depression among Olympians. He also called on the International Olympic Committee and USOPC to do more.
āI do think thereās something to be said when a lot of really, really good athletes kind of talk about the same issue. I know all athletes donāt feel the same way; you have to be a certain type or in a certain head space. Some people just feel things differently,ā said Osaka, a four-time Grand Slam champion and former No. 1-ranked player in tennis who lit the cauldron in Japan.
She's been forthcoming about her bouts with anxiety and depression and was among the first sports figures to take mental-health breaks away from competition, paving the way for others.
Osaka, in turn, said she felt āvery heardā when she listened to Biles and Phelps.
āIām pretty sure a lot of different athletes also felt heard," Osaka said. "They didnāt feel like it was a weakness or anything like that, so Iām really glad we all talked about it.ā
Biles, who redefined excellence in gymnastics and picked up seven Olympic medals along the way, drew attention and, from some, criticism, for pulling out of events in Tokyo because of a mental block ā known in the gymnastics world as āthe twistiesā ā that made her afraid to attempt certain dangerous moves.
That her explanations of what went awry came in such a public setting, as THE biggest star in Tokyo, only made it all the more meaningful to other athletes.
āShe didnāt have to,ā said basketball player Breanna Stewart, a WNBA MVP. āShe used her platform to help others.ā
What Biles did resonated with athletes like canoeist Nevin Harrison, a gold medalist in Tokyo, who said āanxiety, fear, stress ... are all going to be huge parts in competing at such a high level.ā
Biles made them see that there can be a way out.
āI was, at one time, in those shoes," boxer Morelle McCane said, "where I was just like, āItās do or die! Itās do or die!ā"
How different is it for today's Olympians?
Janet Evans won four swimming golds at the 1988 and 1992 Games and recalls the never-easing pressure to perform. In her day, she says, there wasn't nearly the empathy or outlets for help available as there are for today's Olympians.
āWe didnāt talk about the struggles. No one taught me that it was OK to lose, right? I mean, I was Janet Evans, and when I went to a swim meet, I was supposed to win,ā said Evans, the chief athlete officer for the 2028 Los Angeles Games. āWe talk about it now and we recognize it with our athletes. And I think that is an important first step."
Which means that even 38-year-old rugby player Perry Baker has seen changes since his Olympic debut at Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
āYou had to tough it out. You kind of felt by yourself. You kind of felt like you couldnāt talk to anyone,ā said Baker, who briefly was with the NFLās Philadelphia Eagles.
The balance national Olympic committees must strike between caring about athletes as people but making sure the medals pile up is āthreading a needle,ā Evans acknowledged.
āWe should go to the Olympics and Paralympics and win medals. But I donāt think that should be at the cost of how weāre preparing our athletes for the future,ā Evans said. āBoth can happen.ā
That's where Bartley and her counterparts in other countries and at the IOC come in.
The Beijing Winter Games two years ago were the first with extra credentials issued for national Olympic committees to bring athlete welfare officers ā registered mental health professionals or qualified safeguarding experts ā and more than 170 from more than 90 countries will be in Paris.
āWe didnāt have it in Tokyo, and now it will be implemented for every Games,ā said Kirsty Burrows, head of an IOC unit focused on athletesā mental health. āBecause we really see the impact.ā
There will be a 24/7 helpline with mental health counselors who speak more than 70 languages, a program started for the Beijing Games but now available to every Olympian and Paralympian until four years after the event. There's also AI to monitor athletesā social media for cyberbullying, and a āmind zoneā in the athletes village with a yoga area, low lighting, comfortable seating and other tools ādedicated to disconnection, decompression,ā Burrows said.
The USOPC went from six mental-health providers 3 1/2 years ago to 15 now; 14 will be in France. Last year, 1,300 Team USA athletes participated in more than 6,000 therapy sessions set up by the USOPC.
āI expect the numbers to be even higher," Bartley said, āespecially in a Games year.ā
___
AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games