Transitions
Many athletes go through this where the end of your athletic career is upon you. Sometimes it is because you chose to walk away. Sometimes it’s a career ending injury. Sometimes you are not selected to play at the next level. The next level could be going from high school to college, from college to the pros. Maybe you are playing professionally, but the next season you don’t get another contract. Maybe you tried out for a team and didn’t make it. Whatever the case may be as you come to an end of an athletic career, you can torn for a while. How do you handle the rip in your heart and mind?
It depends if you already have your next plan in place. When you don’t have the next phase of life focuses or direction, this space can be scary.
Personally, I was angry. I was angry for many reasons. I felt like a failure. I didn’t know what my purpose was in life anymore. I was mad at myself for all the things I didn’t do when I had the opportunity to do them. Anger turned to sadness because I constantly dwelled on the end. The end of a career. The end of everything I worked at for over 15 years. I was looking at the glass as half empty because I wasn’t ready to move on to the next phase in life. Anger came out in my coaching. Anger came out when talking to other people who, I felt, were taking their opportunities for granted.
I had to realize, it was me, not them that was struggling. I had to realize their dreams may not have been my dream. Imposing and taking out my anger on them wasn’t healthy for either of us. I stopped taking my pain out on others and I started taking the pain out on myself. That was just as unhealthy.
I was torn between what I had a chance to achieve and my reality. What could have been and reality didn’t line up, so I struggled majorly in my rip.
Life doesn’t always hand you a clear sign ahead saying “WARNING: transition imminent.” Planning ahead, regardless of when that plan will take place, is such a valuable tool to have just in case a life transition happens earlier then you expect or happens exactly when you would expect. Having a new guided purpose for your life doesn’t mean the transition phase will be easy; it just decreases your chances of turning to unhealthy alternatives.
This rip doesn’t just happen to athletes, but right now, all I can do is speak from an athletes perspective. I would love to hear your comments, experiences and stories about your rips. Please share in the comment section below.










