| Literature DB >> 31244711 |
Tadhg Eoghan MacIntyre1, Andree M Walkin2, Juergen Beckmann3, Giovanna Calogiuri4, Susan Gritzka5, Greig Oliver2, Aoife A Donnelly6, Giles Warrington2.
Abstract
Traditionally, perceptions about extreme sport athletes being disconnected from nature and a risk-taking population have permeated the research literature. Drawing upon theoretical perspectives from environmental, sport, organizational and positive psychology, this qualitative study attempts to explore the lived experiences of four male and four female extreme sport athletes. The purpose of this study was to gain insight and understanding into the individuals' attitudes toward the benefits of extreme sport activities for well-being, resilience and pro-environmental behavior. Eight participants (Mean age = 40.5 years; SD = ± 12.9) provided written informed consent to partake in semi-structured interviews. Each athlete provided written consented to allow the publication of their identifiable data and in order to facilitate sharing of their autobiographical account of their experiences. After conducting thematic analysis, meta-themes that emerged from the analyses were as follows: (a) early childhood experiences, (b) the challenge of the outdoors, (c) their emotional response to nature, (d) nature for coping, (e) restorative spaces, and (f) environmental concern. The findings convey great commonalities across the participants with regard to their mindset, their emotional well-being as well as their connectivity with nature and attitudes toward the natural environment. The cognitive-affective-social-behavioral linkage of the benefits of extreme sport participation for well-being, psychological recovery and pro-environmental behavior are highlighted. This study examining the lived experiences of extreme sportspeople provides a novel contribution to our contemporary understanding of extreme athletes' relationship to nature and its commensurate impact upon well-being and pro-environmental attitudes. The findings suggest that extreme sport participation, while inherently risky has psychological benefits ranging from evoking positive emotions, developing resilience and life coping skills to cultivating strong affinity to and connection with nature and the natural environment.Entities:
Keywords: blue exercise; emotion – mood; extreme sport; green exercise; nature connectedness; resilience; restorative space; well-being
Year: 2019 PMID: 31244711 PMCID: PMC6546823 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Participant name, gender, nationality and sporting experience.
| Name | Gender | Nationality | Sporting experience |
|---|---|---|---|
| Easkey Britton | F | Irish | Former international professional surfer and big wave surfer |
| Chris Bryan∗ | M | Irish | International competitor in long distance open-water swimming. |
| Rosie Foley∗ | F | Irish | Channel swimmer and former Ireland rugby international (36 caps) |
| Sandra Hyslop | F | British | White-water kayak competitor |
| Jim Kennedy | M | Irish | Ultra-endurance kayak competitor |
| Andreas Küttel | M | Swiss | Three time Olympian in ski-jumping and ski-flying competitor |
| Tehillah McGuinness∗ | F | South African | International professional surfer and big wave surfer |
| Humphrey Murphy | M | Irish | Everest mountaineer and white-water kayaker |
Interview guide structure.
| Interview section | Aim | Exemplar questions |
|---|---|---|
| I. Introduction | To explain the focus of the study and address any initial questions in advance of the discourse. | Do you have any questions before we commence? |
| II. Rapport Building | To develop trust with the participant by referring back to their prior experiences. | Please tell me about your career achievements and personal milestones. |
| III. Identification of Adversity | To examine coping strategies, experience of post-traumatic growth and coping with daily hassles. | What adversities have you faced in your sporting career and how have you coped and thrived in response? |
| IV. Green and Blue Exercise Participation | To explore frequency, type (individual/group), intensity of exercise. | What activities do you do outdoors? |
| V. Place Attachment | To explore place blindness, emotions associated with different natural spaces. | Do you have a favorite natural space? |
| VI. Access to Nature | To address barriers to engaging with nature. | Are there any other barriers or risks to being active in nature? |
| VII. Environmental Sustainability | To explore attitudes toward the environment and sustainability. | What are your views on sustainability and the environment? |
| VIII. Technological Nature | To probe if they augment authentic nature with tech. nature. | Do you need to be in nature for it to impact upon you? |
| IX. Additional comments | To provide an opportunity to discuss any other issues that they would like to raise. | Anything else you would like to add on how blue or green natural spaces can benefit health |
| X. V. Closure | To ensure any anxieties or concerns are addressed before ending the interview. | The next step will be approval of the transcript. |
Figure 1Thematic analysis of the meta-theme early childhood displaying the four themes and nine sub-themes.
Figure 2Thematic analysis of the meta-theme challenge of outdoors displaying the three themes and sub-themes.
Figure 3Thematic analysis of the meta-theme emotional response to nature displaying the two themes and eight sub-themes.
Figure 4Thematic analysis of the meta-theme nature for coping displaying the three themes and three sub-themes.
Figure 5Thematic analysis of the meta-theme restorative spaces displaying the three themes and seven sub-themes.
Figure 6Thematic analysis of the meta-theme environmental concern displaying the three themes and eight sub-themes.