Managing the Many Roles Athletes Have

Managing the Many Roles Athletes Have

Defining Your Roles in and Out of Sports

Athletes have many roles beyond sports…

Every athlete has multiple roles in their lives, such as student, friend, parent, spouse, club member, employee, etc.

Each additional role increases the responsibilities placed upon you. And more demands can translate to more pressure.

If you are to be successful in your sport, you need to learn to balance multiple roles and manage the responsibilities that come along with each role.

Take for example, a high school student-athlete…

The high school student athlete has classes, homework and test preparation in addition to many hours of training, competition travel, weekend games or tournaments.

The student-athlete may also belong to a high school club.

As a member of a family, the student athlete has certain family responsibilities and commitments.

In addition to all these demands, the student athlete needs friends and a social life.

All these roles can pull an athlete in many directions…

Therefore, if you are to be successful in your sport, you need to balance the many roles and associated demands.

American skier and 2014 Olympian, Sadie Bjornsen, has reached the pinnacle of her sport due to her ability to balance training, competing, school, work and a social life.

Not only has Bjornsen dedicated a tremendous number of hours to training in hopes of becoming the first American woman to medal in cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics, but Bjornsen is also pursuing her master’s degree at Alaska Pacific University.

An elite athlete has only so many hours of the day required to succeed as Bjornsen acknowledges.

BJORSEN: “[Cross country skiers] live a pretty wild lifestyle. We don’t have time to come home between races. We live out of these 50-pound suitcases. Every week, we are switching countries.”

When she is not training or competing, Bjorsen spends most of her time studying.

How does Bjorsen handle the many demands and roles she must fulfill, including the pressures of competing at the highest level?

BJORSEN: “I work really closely with a sports psychologist, and I try to check in with her once or twice a week. I do a fair amount of journaling… it’s such an awesome way to get your feelings out.”

Managing all her roles effectively and dealing with all the pressure she faces has been the biggest key to Bjornsen’s success.

In order to managing your roles is to first define those roles.

If your roles are not well-defined, you will carry the weight of all of them with you when you are supposed to be training or competing.

By learning to separate your roles, you be more equipped to block out distractions and focus on training and competing… And be the best athlete you can be.

A Tip for Defining your Roles:

Recognize each role you play in life and the times you are actively engaged in that role.

Understand that you are a person first who happens to compete as an athlete!

Prior to stepping into you athlete role, tell yourself, “Now I am an athlete. I am totally focused on my training.”

With well-defined roles, you will be able to manage the challenges of each role more effectively.

Lear how to focus your best with The Focused Athlete Audio program…


Improve Concentration in Sports!The Focused Athlete

If you’re an athlete who is frequently distracted, loses focus in competition, or wants to learn more about how to focus better under pressure, The Focused Athlete is for you!

Concentration and the ability to focus under adversity is what championship athletes do best.

It only takes one distraction to enter your mind for you to lose a critical point, miss a putt, or lose a second off your lap time. You cannot afford to let distractions run wild in your mind and cause you to make errors at critical times in the game!

The Focused Athlete is a complete system to teach you how to focus like a champion and harness the power of a zone focus every tie you step on the playing field, court, track or course in practice and games!

This workbook and CD program consists of 2 audio CDs that include 14 days of focus boosting exercises and a simple to follow workbook that guides you through each of the 14 days, helps you apply strategies, and customizes the exercises to your personal focus challenges.

Discover:

  • How to quickly identify distractions that sabotage your concentration and how to quickly refocus after distractions.
  • How to use pregame routines to help you harness the power of zone concentration before competition.
  • How to use preshot routines before shots or serves to help you be more task-focused instead of worrying about results.

Learn more about one of our most popular CD programs in The Confident Athlete Series

The Focused Athlete: A 14-Day Plan For Superior Concentration

What are customers saying about our mental game programs?

“I can see that The Confident Athlete Series program is really sort of a lifestyle change. Just as weight loss involves a change in eating habits, confidence involves a change in thinking habits. I recently participated in a registered Skeet tournament and shot the best doubles score I’ve shot in four years. I attribute that score to your program!”
~Kevin Lutgen, Shooter

“I just finished ‘The Confident Athlete Program‘. Improving confidence is a never ending process. I think that confidence boosting is an awesome area. Having a daily mental plan for mental “work outs” can turbo charge anyone’s confidence level…. Studying almost all of Dr. Cohn’s mental game materials gives me a real EDGE over my competitions and most importantly – a boost in my daily life.”
~Radek Sefcik, peaksports.com member

“As a result of reading and implementing The Confident Athlete Series,’ I am once again enjoying golf and letting bad shots roll off my shoulders and appreciating my good shots without attaching expectations. Thanks Dr. Cohn!”
~Stu Blasius, P.G.A. Golf Professional


Boost Your Self-Confidence And Focus With Expert Mental Game Coaching!

If you’re a top performer during practice but find yourself under-performing in competition, the most likely culprit holding you back is your mental game.

Master mental game coach Dr. Patrick Cohn can help you overcome your mental game issues with one-on-one personal mental game coaching.

You can work with Dr. Patrick Cohn himself in Orlando, Florida or via Skype, FaceTime, or telephone. Call us toll free at 888-742-7225 or contact us for more information about the different coaching programs we offer!

What are our mental game coaching students, parents and coaches saying?

“First, I would like to thank you for the help you have given to me through your programs, “The Confident Athlete” and “The Focused Athlete.” I have made tremendous sacrifices though all these years to become a top Olympic Trap shooter but something was missing. This missing part was your help with my mental game. I finished both programs in 2 weeks and I started feeling the difference in my shooting. My scores increased tremendously in record time and people who trained with me told me that I was a different shooter.  Then my first competition came. I shot 117/125 (personal best) and was no. 1 in the ranking. I shot 21/25 in the finals and won the competition.”
~Marios Kapodistrias, shooter

“Ashley wanted me to let you know that she placed very well at her competition this past weekend, thanks to you! She won the short, won the long, and had her personal best. She now looks at her competitions like ice shows and has fun. It is really nice to see her thoroughly enjoying the skate. She is very focused and very confident. We definitely attribute this to you.”
~Brenda Glassco, Skating Parent

“Yes the video series was excellent and very helpful. I appreciate that you give usable information and don’t “bait” people. Much respect for you for that. I’ve been cycling for a few years and joined a race team last year. I moved from a cat-5 to a cat-3 my first year and now am racing masters Cat-1,2,3 here in central California.”
~Blake James, Cyclist

“This is a good kick start to anyone in need of “finding” their way through the mental training underbrush. It keeps you focused and taking constructive action day by day.”
~Dean Hebert, RxRunning & Racing Coach

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