NEW in 2024: COMMUNITY SUPPORT PROGRAMME
In January 2024 Gymnasts for Change became a registered charity in the UK and received a significant grant from a human rights funder to facilitate our survivor led advocacy and support. In spring 2024 we will be launching a range of new community programmes, advocacy & support services. Part of our work will be the development of a brand new membership website to connect survivors in the sport and champion peer to peer campaign and advocacy activities with the aim of transforming the culture of the sport world wide.
Sign up to our mailing list to be part of this exciting next phase of development for our movement.
ADVICE and support
It can be difficult to know where to look when you need support to deal with challenging situations. There is so much information out there that it can sometimes feel overwhelming. We have worked with Integrative Therapist and former GB gymnast Kay Salisbury to develop these resources, which we hope provide a good place to start for anyone who feels they could use some guidance on their path to healing.
We have also compiled some free-to-print wellbeing resources for children, which you can find here.
If you are viewing our site on your smartphone, we recommend turning your screen around to a landscape view to scroll through our resources slideshow.
We cannot emphasise enough that it is not one specific comment, one specific strike, one specific incident of punitive punishment or humiliation that we are referring to when we talk about emotional and physical abuse in gymnastics.
Instead, it is the cumulative effect of sustained, long-term, weekly, daily and hourly negative feedback; the surveillance and control of every move, the routine humiliation and bullying that happens over years, that causes the damage - leaving the gymnast with the feeling that they are useless and not worth listening to.
Through these coaching practices, gymnasts are made to feel as though they deserve the abuse, because they are inherently deficient, falling well below the standard the coach considers acceptable. This is why they do not report their abuse. They have been socialised into believing that their experiences are insignificant, and are proportionate to the inadequacy of their performance.
From day one, gymnasts are not gifted the agency or credited with the intelligence to judge the standard of their own performance. Instead, the gymnast is held hostage in an unequal power game, where their self-esteem and sense of self lies entirely in the hands of the abusive coach - rendering the gymnast unable to identify the magnitude of their mistreatment.
Often it is only in later life, when the gymnast is far removed from the training context, that the trauma caused can resurface. Even then, correctly naming what happened to them as abuse can be challenging. The gymnasts instinctively attempt to detach the impact of the coach’s behaviour, and dismiss their feelings of low self-worth as originating in their own character - as opposed to being rooted entirely in the abuse. The resources on this page have been curated as a way to help gymnasts and former gymnasts to identify some of the common issues that persist in later life.
Get the help you need.
Many athletes need specialist support to process the intensity of their athletic experiences and ensure they find healthy coping skills to deal with the stress and pressures of life’s enevitable challenges. If you’d like to explore 1:2:1 therapy to help pocess your experinces in the sport of gymnastics then Kay Sailsbury is here to help. Please reach out if you’re interested in exploring how you could work together.
www.therapykay.co.uk
other resources
We have collected some of the best resources discussing support for athletes from around the web
Retiring as an athlete
The emotional impact of retiring as an athlete is something that remains relatively undiscussed. In this series of podcasts for the BBC, Olympic rower Helen Glover talks to three renowned athletes about what retirement meant for them, and how to make the most of your next steps after a career in competitive sport.
These three articles also go into detail about the particular challenges and emotional responses that retiring athletes can experience.
Life after sport: depression in the retired athlete
When athletes retire, we face the most difficult question: who are we?
Falling at the final hurdle, transitioning to life after sport
PERSONALITY
In this podcast, retired athlete and Vice President of Headway James Cracknell talks to Katya Adler about how our personalities can be influenced by our experiences - both physical and mental. Craknell discusses his experiences after suffering an injury to the brain a decade ago, which caused some of his personality traits to change.
BODY IMAGE
In this BBC podcast, poet and runner Helen Mort talks to retired Olympic track and field athlete Anyika Onuora about body image in sport.
Onuora shares her thoughts on body confidence and the effects training and competitive sport have on the body’s shape.
tackling external stresses
In this interview with Athletics Weekly, Olympian Marilyn Okoro discusses the support groups she has set up for athletes in areas such as sponsorship and career transition, to help them avoid the “impossible” situation many athletes can find themselves in.
“I think a lot more focus should have been on competing and racing rather than a lot of the stresses that could have been avoided with better planning and support.”
EATING DISORDERS IN SPORT
In this documentary for BBC Panorama, sports presenter and retired Olympic athlete Colin Jackson explores the extent of eating disorders within British sport and considers what those in power should do to protect athletes and tackle the issue.
Also shedding a light on eating disorders in sport and sharing his own personal experience, former cricketer Freddie Flintoff discusses tackling eating disorders and challenges the stigma around the condition in men.
charities, Helplines and support groups
Samaritans
The Samaritans helpline responds to calls from anyone who needs a listening ear. You can also contact them via email and their self-help app.
Brand You Sport
Brand You Sport support athletes to develop their branding, and from the earliest stages lay the groundwork for a successful, post-athletics career.
CALM
The CALM helpline is for people in the UK who are down or have hit a wall for any reason, who need to talk or find information and support.
Sportsaid
SportsAid supports over 1,000 athletes each year by providing them with a financial award to help towards training and competition costs.
BEAT
BEAT is the UK’s eating disorder charity. They offer information, support and resources for eating disorder sufferers and their friends and families.
GLL Sport Foundation
GLL supports young athletes to achieve their potential by reducing the cost burden of training and competition to bridge the gap in sports inequalities.
MIND
Mind provides support to empower anyone experiencing a mental health problem to understand their condition and the choices available to them.