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“You Can Sit in the Middle or Be One of the Outliers”: Older Male Athletes and the Complexities of Social Comparison

机译:“你可以坐在中间或成为异常值之一”:年龄较大的男运动员和社会比较的复杂性

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Sporting events for older adults are proliferating in both popularity and participation numbers, mirroring the growth that is occurring globally with an aging population. Preliminary evidence indicates that older athletes have a tendency to compare themselves (in terms of their performance, participation, and aging) to inactive older adults deemed ‘worse-off’. Using social comparison theory as a guiding framework, our aim was to explore the way athletes spoke about their own sport participation and the extent to which that influenced their perceptions of other people in their age cohort. We also interpreted their stories in the broader context of current policies which promote sport across the lifespan. For this study, 17 male competitive athletes (age range from 70 to 90 years) who participated in either the 2013 or 2017 World Masters Games were interviewed as part of a larger project on the meaning of sport in their lives. Seven different sports were represented, and participants hailed from multiple countries. We used qualitative methods to interview each participant, analyze individual transcripts, and develop common themes across the data set to address the aforementioned aims. Two major themes emerged from the analysis, Sport as social comparison: “It’s the competitive nature” and Downward comparisons. A number of participants commented on the nature of sport, and competitive sport in particular, as being important to their motivation to train and prepare. This results-oriented environment appeared to provide a fertile ground for social comparison. Within the theme of Downward comparisons, we established two categories; Resisting loss, and Assigning blame. While downward comparisons were used by our participants to separate themselves from other seniors of the same age, thereby bolstering their sense of self, they also tied those comparisons to individual responsibility for health and believed that compromised health was due to individual negligence and bad decisions. Ultimately, the useful psychological strategy of social comparison for maintaining a positive sense of self and performance may also have some unintended individual and societal consequences.
机译:老年人的体育赛事在普及和参与号码中都是增强的,镜像在全球人口上全球发生的增长。初步证据表明,老年运动员具有比较自己的倾向(在他们的表现,参与和老龄化方面)不活跃的老年人认为“更糟糕”。利用社会比较理论作为指导框架,我们的目标是探索运动员谈到自己的运动参与以及影响他们在其年龄群组中对其他人的看法的程度。我们还将他们的故事解释在更广泛的当前政策的更广泛的背景下,这些政策促进了寿命的运动。对于这项研究,17名男性竞技运动员(70至90年的年龄范围)参加了2013年或2017年世界大道赛,作为一个更大项目的一部分,就在其生命中的体育意义。七种不同的运动被代表,与众不同的参与者来自多个国家。我们使用定性方法来采访每个参与者,分析单个成绩单,并在数据集中开发共同主题,以解决上述目标。从分析中出现了两个主要主题,运动作为社会比较:“这是竞争性的”和向下的比较。一些参与者对体育的性质评论,特别是竞争运动,这对他们培训和准备的动机很重要。此成果导向的环境似乎为社会比较提供了一种肥沃的基础。在向下比较的主题内,我们建立了两类;抵制损失,并指责。虽然我们的参与者使用了向下的比较,但我们的参与者将自己与同龄中年的其他老年人分开,从而与他们的自我感,他们也将这些比较与个人对健康的责任联系在一起,相信损害的健康是由于个人过失和糟糕的决定是损害的。最终,保持积极情感和表现的社会比较的有用心理策略也可能有一些意外的个人和社会后果。

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