Acting out sexually served as a complex, temporary form of empowerment for one female ex-athlete to self-manage the physical and emotional abuse she experienced from male coaches.
Case Report (n=1)
Highlights the complex, sometimes taboo self-management strategies abused athletes may develop post-sport due to a lack of support.
In this paper, the authors make use of narrative inquiry from the position of a story teller by using creative nonfiction to bring forward the complexities of abuse in sport. Through the use of vignettes, one female athlete’s story of how she self-managed her abuse post sport by acting out sexually is made known. As taboo stories tend to be silenced in sport literature, this research foregrounds how one athlete took back the power and control with men as a way of self-managing the physical and emotional abuse she experienced from male coaches. Although a temporary fix, the vignettes highlight how this athlete’s selfmanagement strategies were a complex form of empowerment, a contrast to what she felt when she was the recipient of abuse. The reader is encouraged to construct their own understanding of the athlete’s stories, thinking with her story rather than about her story. This paper contributes to understandings of athlete abuse by providing insight into the lack of support an athlete received post sport and further how she was expected to fend for herself, formulating her own self-management/coping strategies. Sport managers developing interventions and strategies related to abused athletes should consider the diverse challenges that they face.
McMahon et al. (Fri,) conducted a case report in Abuse in sport (n=1). Self-management strategies (acting out sexually) was evaluated on Self-management and coping post sport. Acting out sexually served as a complex, temporary form of empowerment for one female ex-athlete to self-manage the physical and emotional abuse she experienced from male coaches.