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Injury Isn’t Just Physical: How Therapy Helps Athletes Navigate Setbacks
When athletes get injured, everyone talks about rehab timelines.
Few people talk about the hit to identity.
The loss of control.
The quiet fear that whispers, What if I don’t come back the same?
Injury doesn’t just disrupt training.
It disrupts meaning.
For many endurance and mountain athletes, sport isn’t a hobby. It’s structure. It’s community. It’s self-trust. It’s how you regulate stress and feel competent in the world.
When that’s gone — even temporarily — it can feel destabilizing.
Here are six ways therapy helps athletes navigate injury and setbacks in a way that builds long-term resilience, not just a short-term comeback.
Minding the Gap: Confidence in the Face of the Abyss
Staring across the bergschrund, a lump forms in my throat and my stomach churns. Before me lies a deep, dark blue void—a seemingly bottomless icy crevasse at the top of the glacier. The sight is both awe-inspiring and terrifying. Cold air surrounds me, and the sound of water dripping somewhere in the blackness below adds to the tension. When I peer into the darkness, a sense of dread overtakes me. The summit isn’t far from this point. We’re so close, but somehow, it doesn’t feel certain that I’ll ever reach it.
The Rearview Mirror: Life Changes
Seven-years ago I got a PR in a 5k. My time was twenty-minutes – zero seconds.
Almost a sub-twenty…almost.
This was at fifty-years old. Just six months later I qualified for the Boston marathon for the fourth time and did it with time to spare all the while holding back knowing it was just a ‘B’ race.
Later that year I finished the Leadville 100 run and bike just separated by a week (the bike just after the cut-off).