Mental health issues a major concern for Canadian athletes amid COVID-19
Melissa Humana-Paredes finds comfort on the eight-by-eight-metre half of a beach volleyball court. Feeling the soft sand underfoot, the world champion begins to mentally decompress.
But since COVID-19 shuttered sports around the world, Canada’s elite athletes have lost access to courts, gyms, pools and tracks — the places they’d always been able to count on to find relief in tough times.
“The ability to just be able to go outside to a beach for a couple hours a day, that is my release. When I’m inside my court, inside my box, that’s my mental health time, that’s my me time, that’s when I get to decompress from the rest of the world,” Humana-Paredes said. “I don’t have that escape anymore.”
The 27-year-old from Toronto won gold with partner Sarah Pavan at last year’s world championships. The two would have been medal favourites at this summer’s Tokyo Olympics before the coronavirus brought global sport to its knees. Not only have the Games been postponed to the summer of 2021, but this season’s world beach volleyball tour has been scrapped.