IOC sets up guidance programme on life after Olympics
Beijing: It's almost over. After years of preparation, athletes are heading home from the Beijing Olympics to resume jobs, studies, training, and a handful to cash in on new-found fame - and many will struggle to adjust.
Reality can be a far cry from the dazzling opening ceremony on August 8 when 10,500 athletes were hailed as the world's sporting elite, from competing in spectacular venues in and around Beijing and from living with the support network of thousands of their peers.
Post-Olympic blues, identity crises and eating disorders are all common after an Olympics, according to sports psychologists who have been playing a greater role in the leadup to the Games and also afterwards, with many nations offering counselling.
Danielle de Bruijn, 30, whose seven goals secured a gold medal for the Dutch women's water polo team, said heading home could be difficult, especially for athletes who had not done as well as expected and were retiring.
"We came fourth in Sydney 2000 and 11 of the 13 players quit after the Games and went into a black hole," Bruijn said.
"I'm retiring after Beijing but I've got gold so I have achieved what I wanted. I'm having a holiday then to work as a financial administrator."
She said the Dutch team organisers, like many national Olympic committees, ensured counselling was available for athletes if they had trouble with the let-down.
Like many athletes, Bruijn quit work 18 months before Beijing to focus on training but she had a plan in place for afterwards unlike German triathlon gold medallist Jan Frodeno.
"My life's plan ended about an hour ago," he said after his race. "This was the dream of my life. I didn't have a plan B and I don't know what's next."
Peter Clarke, a psychologist for the British women's curling team at the winter Olympics in 2002 and 2006, said even athletes who went home with gold medals could struggle.
"Gold medal winners have been known to suffer from such things as sudden lack of identity," Clarke told Reuters.
"Having to deal with the stresses and strains of arduous training for so many years together with the total disruption of 'normal' social activities can be very difficult to handle."
British cyclist Bradley Wiggins, who won two gold medals in Beijing, was positively muted on the podium this time around compared with the raw emotions he showed after winning in Athens.
"I don't do emotion any more," he said. "Athens nearly destroyed me...I was a mature athlete but an immature person."
He said he was so overwhelmed by his gold from Athens that he didn't concentrate on subsequent team races, went out drinking and didn't bother to get enough sleep.
Talk about it
Jenny Susser, a clinical health psychologist specialising in sport at New York's Hospital for Special Surgery, said the mental pressure on athletes was more widely recognised and sport psychology played a bigger role at each Olympics. "Awareness of the emotions will help and getting the athletes to talk can be an easy way to help them out," she told Reuters.
The International Olympic Committee recognised this during the Beijing Games and launched a programme to help athletes.
The programme aims to provide guidance and tools to help them to manage training, competition and the challenges and opportunities of day-to-day life.
But for some the disappointment of years of training to miss out on a medal was too much. Brazilian beach volleyball player Ana Paula Connelly moved her seven-year-old son in with her sister while she trained. She was eliminated in the quarterfinals.
Post-Olympic blues, identity crises and eating disorders are all common after an Olympics, according to sports psychologists...
Sign up for the Daily Briefing
Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox
Network Links
GN StoreDownload our app
© Al Nisr Publishing LLC 2026. All rights reserved.