- Joined
- Dec 7, 2022
Thats true. I guess their whole identity is being a figure skater and competitor. Medvedeva started taking college courses on journalism or something after retirement, Zagitova became an MC, etc...
Its all a strive for identity, thats why so many people who hit such high peaks end up getting depressed and having problems etc, because they lose their identity eventually. Its easy for them to put it off, to keep the identity but not be forced to participate given they clearly lost the passion. But if they officially make the life decision to move on, then their identity is in big question which is a problem.
It doesnt just happen with pro athletes but regular people as well. When people hit their 20s and have to get a job and drop their sports dreams, they dont know who they are any more. Their whole lives in school they were known as that one guy whos really good at sports, then all of a sudden they dont even play sports; who even are they know?
I think that has more to do with it than the sponsorship explanation or whatever.
Hm, yeah, I can absolutely see this and I think it is a factor. However there are definitely differences in countries and sports. In other sports I watch it is way more normal to retire officially, even in individual Olympic sports. And for instance the Japanese skaters make an official retirement announcement as soon as they actually stop competing although the identity issue shouldn't be smaller for them. I'm pretty sure Nathan Chen has an identity and clear path ahead of him away from figure skating; apparently he's quite busy with his studies and other academic related stuff, still I haven't heard him make an official announcement while I don't think he intends to come back competitively.
So... I'm assuming that sponsorships in combination with culture/customs play a role.
And it's their life and their decision, not mine to make- it would just likely be easier for me if it was different.