Athletes can battle effects of maltreatment in sport well into adulthood
Brittany Rogers is an adult now and three years removed from her athletic career, yet the cutting words of her childhood gymnastics coaches still play like a broken record in her mind.
You’re fat. You’re stupid. You’re not good enough.
“I don’t think I fully grasped the magnitude of how bad it was until I was removed from the sport,” Rogers said. “And not until I was fully retired could I reflect and see how it has affected me personally today and the aftermath I’m still dealing with.”
Rogers, who competed for Canada at both the 2012 and 2016 Olympics, is among dozens of current and retired gymnasts who penned an open letter to Sport Canada about the maltreatment in their sport. While it’s alarming in any sport, emotional and physical abuse in gymnastics usually involves minors. The double-edged sword is they carry these wounds into adulthood.