After years of training and demanding workouts, a small group of former football players sought to master a new playing field – their minds.
Through an eight-week workshop, offered by Healthy Minds Innovations, a nonprofit associated with the Center for Healthy Minds at UW–Madison, former NFL and college football players learned mindfulness-based practices such as meditation, mindful movements and mindful breathing to see if they might be useful in their daily lives.
Post-survey responses from former athletes suggested they experienced improvements in sleep, a positive shift in how they related to physical pain as well as increased feelings of gratitude during their day-to-day activities.
Like other groups such as veterans and law enforcement where mindfulness-based practices are being investigated, former professional football players experience stress and injury at a higher rate.
“This was an important first step to determine if a more formal research project should be launched to assess whether mental trainings could be useful,” says Richard Davidson, founder and director of the Center for Healthy Minds who served as the lead advisor for the project. “We found that mental trainings seem to be useful and accessible to former football players. Yet feasibility is just the first step – these are self-report surveys and are not considered research-based recommendations put through the scrutiny of scientific peer-review.”