2021
DOI: 10.1080/2159676x.2021.1901136
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

‘It has to hurt’: A phenomenological analysis of elite runners´ experiences in handling non-injuring running-related pain

Abstract: Running can be a painful endeavour. In this article, we focus on four elite middle-distance runners' experience of non-injuring running-related pain, with the aim of better understanding how their handling of pain is a part of their expertise as elite athletes competing on an international level. The article employs phenomenological clarifications of bodily self-consciousness and pain in the analysis of an ethnographic fieldwork carried out during four months in a Danish elite middle-distance training group. T… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
17
0

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
9

Relationship

2
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 19 publications
(18 citation statements)
references
References 34 publications
(36 reference statements)
1
17
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Specifically, coaches expressed their awareness of potential indicators for injury, recovery strategies for overcoming injury, and ability to tolerate injury, indicating a particular value placed on this specific component in their selection criteria. This is in strong alignment with the research surrounding the sub-culture of distance running that embraces pain and discomfort [32,73]. Not only does this finding shed light on the coaches' selection preferences, it also sheds light on the coaches' subjective beliefs of running talent, which may in turn, cyclically inform their selection decisions.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Specifically, coaches expressed their awareness of potential indicators for injury, recovery strategies for overcoming injury, and ability to tolerate injury, indicating a particular value placed on this specific component in their selection criteria. This is in strong alignment with the research surrounding the sub-culture of distance running that embraces pain and discomfort [32,73]. Not only does this finding shed light on the coaches' selection preferences, it also sheds light on the coaches' subjective beliefs of running talent, which may in turn, cyclically inform their selection decisions.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Distance running, marathon running, trail running, track running, and more “experimental” forms of running have also been investigated via this phenomenological lens (e.g. Allen-Collinson et al, 2019; Bluhm and Ravn, 2021; Gross, 2021; Rochat et al, 2018). Embracing aquatic environments, and employing Merleau-Pontian perspectives, McNarry et al (2020) explore competitive swimming, while Liu (2021), also drawing on Sheets-Johnstone's work, considers waka ama (Māori canoe) paddling.…”
Section: Phenomenological Sociology and Sensuous Sporting Embodimentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet the fact that running, for example, is initially considered an ability does not mean that running skills cannot be developed. Depending on the running discipline, these kinds of skills might include, for example, adeptly adjusting one's running speed in relation to other runners in a race, optimizing one's running efficiency in long-distance running, and/or ideally coping with noninjurious pain in middle distance running (e.g., Hockey and Allen-Collinson, 2016;Lev, 2019Lev, , 2020Bluhm and Ravn, 2021).…”
Section: A Phenomenological Approach To Embodied Learning and The Incorporation Of Skillsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The growing amount of research focusing on how senses and attention take shape in the process of incorporating skills confirms this and illustrates how the incorporation of skills involves the development of sensing and ways of attending to these sensations. Examples of these descriptions include Gunn Nyberg's work on experiential aspects of embodied learning (Nyberg et al, 2020) and on the somatic grasping of practical knowing of free skiers (Nyberg, 2015); Bluhm and Ravn's analysis of middle-distance runners' expertise in handling their sensation of non-injurious pain while running (Bluhm and Ravn, 2021), and several analyses of how professional dancers use their sensorial awareness when practicing and performing (e.g., Ravn, 2017;Ehrenberg, 2021;Pini and Deans, 2021).…”
Section: Skills and Recreational Mountain-bikingmentioning
confidence: 99%