Social Science

Extreme Psychology

There may be more to high-risk sports than a “no fear” mantra.

July 13, 2009
Rock climbing and other extreme sports put athletes at risk of serious injury or death. Psychologists are <br>studying the reasons that drive people to such extremes. [Credit: Carl A, flickr.com]
Rock climbing and other extreme sports put athletes at risk of serious injury or death. Psychologists are
studying the reasons that drive people to such extremes. [Credit: Carl A, flickr.com]

Changing a Paradigm: An Alternative Theory of Extreme Sport Psychology

A sensation-seeking basis for extreme sports participation has some holes in it that Eric Brymer hopes to rip wide open. Most research that examines the connection between extreme sports and sensation-seeking has used Zuckerman’s self-reporting survey. Usually only the highest 25 percent of sensation-seekers are used in these studies, biasing the research toward sensation-seeking from the start. This often limits the study group to young males in their teens and early twenties — individuals who statistically take higher risks, while ignoring the motivations of the broader extreme sports community, which ranges in age from teenagers on up to women and men in their 50s and 60s.

One of the difficulties in studying extreme sports has been the definition — which sports should be included and what extreme really means. Skateboarding, bungee jumping and rock climbing are three sports with very different outcomes that traditionally fall under the extreme sports umbrella. For example, rock climbing can be done in an extreme or non-extreme matter. “But in the extreme sports literature, climbing is just climbing, there’s no differentiation of whether you’re climbing without ropes at a high level or with ropes at a low level,” says Brymer. Because of this ambiguity, Brymer classifies extreme sports narrowly in his research as sports in which the negative outcomes of a mistake could be severe injury or death.

Extreme activities must also fit the traditional definition of sport — a physical activity that requires skill, usually gained through practice. This might eliminate a risky pursuit such as bungee jumping, where just about any tourist can get strapped in and jump off a bridge or a tower for the right price — no skill involved.

Brymer and others are throwing out preconception — extreme sports psychologists traditionally haven’t made such distinctions — and going beyond the stereotypical young male, sensation-seeking, adrenaline junkie to inquire into the experiences of a wide range of extreme sport participants. They are borrowing a method, traditionally used by philosophers, called phenomenology. In Greek it means, “to study that which appears.” Brymer is doing just that, cataloging the personal experiences of extreme athletes in their own words to get at the crux of their potentially dangerous endeavors.

“You have to suspend your judgment,” says Carla Willig, a psychologist at the City University of London. “You just can’t start out by saying, ‘my god, what’s wrong with these people?’” Willig has also used phenomenology to better understand why people do risky things, and along with Brymer, has now applied it to identify a number of themes common to most extreme athletes’ experiences.

One question guided Brymer’s interviews and analyses: “How is the extreme sport experience perceived by participants?” Certain themes emerged, such as courage and humility, which give rise to positive self-transformation. “At the end of the day I had an epiphany because I did not die, but really enjoyed it. A whole environment that I never knew existed was opened to me,” said a BASE jumper in his mid-forties, one of Brymer’s study subjects. “For me, it’s accepting that you’re mortal and that you’re very vulnerable,” said another one of Brymer’s BASE jumpers. The findings are published in the January 2009 issue of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology.

Life-Changing Endeavors

The participants that Brymer and Willig studied were aware of the grave dangers posed by slip-ups in their respective sports. As a whole, the extreme sports community emphasizes the importance of minimizing risk through preparing and building technical expertise and by knowing one’s limits. “The goal is always to not to get hurt,” says rock and ice climber Rich Gottlieb, who was not one of Brymer’s study subjects. The focus on minimizing risk sets these athletes apart from pure thrill seekers.

Allan Warren, 28, a whitewater kayaker from Alaska who has conquered Class V rapids — fast rivers with large waves that require expert skill level to maneuver — acknowledges that what he does might look crazy, from an outsider’s perspective, but insists that he knows exactly what he is capable of. “It’s not like I’m going out there with the intention of putting my life in danger or trying to scare the god out of myself,” he says. “It’s hard for people to understand why someone like me would want to charge down a Class V river. They don’t understand, because my skill level is beyond theirs. In order to feel challenged, this is what I have to do, this is my comfort level.”

That isn’t to say Allan Warren is never afraid.

“You can hear the rapid and even feel the rumble of it before you see it,” he says of kayaking a big, fast river like the White Nile in Uganda. “It’s intimidating. Waves rise above your head and explode over your boat – light goes in and out, your boat gets pitched around like a twig.”

When facing Class V rapids, “No Fear” just doesn’t exist, according to Warren.

“Anyone who tells you they aren’t afraid is lying — or they actually are one of those crazy people,” says Warren. “The fear is what keeps you focused.”

That fear, according to Brymer, is exactly what sets serious extreme athletes apart from your high sensation-seeking junkie. “You just wouldn’t expect a thrill seeker to feel fear,” he said. Fear also plays a role in developing courage and humility. Extreme sports participation at the level where serious injury or death is a real outcome triggers humility by putting the fragility of one’s own life into perspective.

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Discussion

14 Comments

Scott says:

Very good story. It really gives a different perspective of people many of us would consider “crazy,” yet they are more accurately highly trained athletes with clear focus on detail, technical skills, and most importantly safety.

Allan Warren says:

Very good story Lindsey. As you know I’ve been anxious about it because I was so curious as to what you found. It’s interesting to me that my comments matched fairly closely with the research being done.

I found the part about flow particularly interesting. In my undergraduate studies I was a double major in philosophy and religious studies. I remember a moment in my Zen Buddhism class when I was talking to the professor about whether or not I was practicing my meditation outside of class. My response was that there are many ways to meditate, to focus the mind and to reach a state of no thought. Whether skiing, climbing, or kayaking, outdoor sport has always been my method for reaching that state of spiritual connection.

Thanks for putting this together, it’s really interesting.

neva says:

hello..
Now I want to write research about “Meaning life of Extreme Sport People”. I need reference. can you help me??? I need result of any research about it. journal or ebook. (sorry if my vocabullary and Grammar is not good, I can’t speak English so well). Sorry if I bother you and thankyou for your attention.

Patrick Boyer says:

Can you please tell me how to get in touch with the photographer of the picture used on Lindsey Konkel’s article posted July 13, 2009. I want to get permission to use that rock climbing/repelling picture.

Thanks,
Patrick

Laurie T says:

Good article. I am a therapist who treats individuals with drug addiction. I’m also interested in High Sensation Seekers as well as Highly Sensitive People. From what I have gathered, Elaine Aron, author of The Highly Sensitive Person, there is actually a type of individual who is Highly Sensitive and also a High Sensation Seeker. A person with both traits is likely to take very calculated and thoughtful risks, and being intelligent and often creative, will take those risks that would cause “normal” human beings to think they are crazy, when in fact, they can see, hear, feel and sense things that others are not able to. This will assist in them being able to handle difficult and risky adventures.

Shane Rathbun says:

Good luck trying to understand it from the outside.

“Death plays a huge role in why men climb, in the way they climb and why some of them eventually quit climbing in the high mountains. Alpinism often means high risk and the loss of life. Your friends may die up there in the clouds, in storms, swept away by avalanches, or cowering under a volley of stones. Perhaps they’ll freeze to death alone at the bottom of a deep, dark crevasse or sit down to rest and never get up again. This is the long fall, where the sky is rose and the mountains have never been as beautiful as they are today. Life bleeds away from a head injury, unnoticed. It’s about climbers dying doing what they love and spectators speculating, judging, and maybe having the last word. Alpinism is the story of men and the risks men take, the ones they are equal to, the ones they barely get away with, and those risks that kill them. It is about obsession. The danger and the glory, the addiction of going harder, higher, longer. Sometimes we get away with it, we survive when others do not.”

Clare Mundy says:

A nicely written article with balance that asks that all important question of why risk your life? One thing that isn’t mentioned and seems obvious to non sensation seekers is that we feel strongly attached to our lives and the meaning of life. This would make, I think, one of the most interesting avenues to explore next – how to attach people to their lives so that they can get that high level of dopamine response from just breathing. Many people can get highs from ordinary pleasures such as a second biscuit with their cup of tea (read Bill Bryson – Notes From a Small Island – for a description of just that!) so you have to assume that it is possible and the neat trick would be to realign brain chemistry to allow people to get to that state without the need for external stimulus. Meditation can get you there and I can’t help feeling that some use of extreme sports may be nothing more than putting pressure on the individual to concentrate intensely. Although claims of extreme physical activity being a way to get into ‘the zone’ perhaps that’s because it may be a short cut to getting in ‘the zone’ This would make a strong link between a group of people who also drink, take drugs etc because that personality type is tuned to using short cuts to pleasure. Humans naturally tend to find the simplest way of reaching their goals unless the insula provides inhibition.

Yahn :) says:

I’d like to try out flying from above the sky, and then surviving the fall to tell everyone what it felt like. It’s the feeling of cheating death that sometimes gives the high, same as proving that you’re in control and not anyone else is–not even higher being that whether or not exists.

You realize therefore considerably in the case of this matter, made me individually believe it from so many numerous angles. Its like women and men are not interested except it’s something to do with Woman gaga! Your individual stuffs excellent. Always take care of it up!

Trevor33 says:

Reading about this, people who have high achievement to the other extreme, fear of failure, anxiety, depression and other mental illness, I am highly convinced that the primary neurotransmitter “if control” in the brain is Dopamine. For example, I think they are totally wrong with the medical industry to focus on Serotonin. When we know anti depressants don’t work in 3/4 of the people for depression and anxiety. However, give anyone a *small* dose of Adderall or Amphetamine. All of sudden that person acts like their true self…the fear, anxiety, and depression lifts like magic. I know this sounds off topic, however, lately everything seems to focus on Dopamine in all aspects of Psychology. It is interesting to see people struggling severely in therapy, then a subtle increase in dopamine and *all of a sudden* they are in touch with themselves and like they never had a problem at all doing more fearful things that caused the problems in the first place. The biggest problem is that there is more than Dopamine and the drugs, like extreme sports that enhance it are addictive, the anti depressants they have now don’t do much because depression usually improves in 4-6 weeks anyways with the placebo effect. Dopamine I believe controls everything in the mind. All the other chemicals are “subsystems”

climber says:

I came across this article when searching for information on HSP’s (highly sensitive persons) who are athletes, as I consider myself both. I have done various extreme sports for many years at a moderate level.
As an HSP I will analyze things to death before doing them, and usually avoid over-stimulation in my everyday life. I’m the first one home from every party and can find pleasure in very small things. At the same time, taking on and mastering a physically risk-filled situation gives me intense and lasting pleasure, a very joyful feeling of privilege. The only way I can describe it is the feeling of making the impossible possible. Maybe this is true for other so-called “sensation seekers”, we’re not so much seeking “sensation” as the otherworldly feeling of mastering the impossible.

Michael Maltese says:

I have known a lot of extreme sport athletes over the years and many were. or are drug addicts alcoholics etc. I have wondered many times if there was some sort of corralation between the two. and I was correct in my assumptions. Great article BTW Michael Maltese

ROBERT MCKERCHER says:

Very interesting article. Thanks for this!

I am a skydiver, and am very interested in the brain activity and psycology of individuals who share a passion for my sport. To date, I have never met a community of individuals as full of compassion, humour, honesty, and gratitude towards life than i have with the skydiving community.

I have never had addiction problems. I have a fascination with human behaviour and human potential. I wish there were more studies done on the minds of extreme athletes.

If anyone would like to personally delve into this topic in more detail, by all means, feel free to email me. I would gladly answer any questions…about our sport or about myself.

Cheers!

Ross F says:

Great article, I stumbled upon this after reading a fascinating 2018 study “Psychiatric Aspects of Extreme Sports: 3 Case Studies” It’s an interesting read for anyone who enjoyed this https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5798939/?report=classic

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