Grief: When Love Has Nowhere To Go

The first time I acknowledged that I was mourning my own life while simultaneously living it, I felt weak. After decades of mental resiliency I was ashamed to tell anyone that I was lost; how do you ask someone to help you find your identity? Who could possibly begin to understand how one morning I was waking up an elite athlete and the next I was waking up angry with tears at the 3am gym-alarm I’d forgotten to delete… who even does that?

An athlete that no longer has a team does that… a retired athlete filled with grief does that… a person with love for something that is gone does that.

The anger and tears released at 3am were only the beginning. For two years I fought a silent battle for my own identity expression; inadequacy, self-disgust, purpose-less, forgotten, powerless and alone. I wish I could say I experienced an epiphany moment that changed my mindset and life forever; that’s just not me. My healing has looked eerily similar to athletic development; slow, steady, faith-focused and rooted in small, daily intention to improve.

I needed to remember that I was somebody before sports and that little girl of value was still a part of me.

Vulnerability: wow is this a fun word for strong, elite athletes or what!? — Vulnerability is where I began to find my identity. I stopped faking resiliency and answered, “how are you doing without sports” with an honest and painful, “not good at all – in fact I think I’m dying.” With a lump in my throat, I listened to the words of wisdom others shared with me that breathed life back into me; into my identity. As I removed myself from team-oriented social media, I cried. In full transparency, I’ve been crying the entire time I’ve been trying to write this — much of my love has nowhere to go and it still hurts.

After almost 25 years of high-level competition sports, I am about 1 year into healthy-retirement (those first 2 were brutal). While claiming to “be an athlete” no longer feels like me, I know I am athletic… I am still able. Who I am and what I am capable of did not cease alongside my career and this I get to celebrate. There is still so much learning and feeling to be had along this journey and I sincerely hope for joy through it all; for all.

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About the Author

Brooklyn Holton

Brooklyn is a retired athlete from a career that included being a DII Heptathlete, All-American Women’s Professional Football Player and a 3x TeamUSA Bobsled Medalist. While still loving an athlete-focused lifting program, Brooklyn has expanded her love for sports to include riding her dirtbike, backcountry snowboarding, backpacking, trail running and embracing the freedom of saying, “yes” to random adventures. She is learning that retirement includes intentional healing both cognitively and physically and credits her faith for the strength to journey towards a fulfilling future; still as an athlete.