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Mind, body and spirit
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To what extent can sports help shape your personality? Read on...
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TEAMWORK Coached with the right attitude, players are value additions to a team
The idea that sports and exercise build character has been around for ages. In Plato's time, the Greeks exercised naked in public and even in the snow, and compulsory physical education was the norm. The sports-builds-character notion reached it zenith in the boarding schools of England 2000 years later. The idea dissipated somewhat in the 20th century.
Modern Psychology distrusts words like character, and the idea gathered disfavour in popular culture - see and read Bill Watterson's cartoon character Calvin moan about his father's attempts to kill him by character building.
Wear your attitude
Sports enthusiasts claim that regular play builds integrity, fairness, work and teamwork ethics and fortitude. So how come sports is full of unfair tackles, frequent appealing, bad temper and cheating and gamesmanship? How come Maradona's hand of god goal became so iconic?
Sports has been claimed to help people view situations from multiple perspectives. Thinking like one's opponent, and acting in harmony with other team members efforts are the elements of a thinking sportsperson's mind.
Empathy is the by-product of this thinking, and psychologists feel that empathy is lacking in juvenile delinquents. But empathy is not always there in a sportsperson's makeup. Studies show that sportspersons are more likely to disregard their opponents' injuries. Sometimes game plans are altered to take advantage of an opponent's limitations through injury.
Whatever this is, it ain't character. Disturbingly, a few studies found that athletes scored less on moral reasoning than their non-playing peers. Moral reasoning is not an automatic fruit of sports: much depends on how the game is taught. Football coaches who teach ugly tackles are more likely to raise players with aggression and unfair play hardwired into them. If unfair play is frowned upon, as in most martial arts, it breeds fairness and integrity.
Sports builds motivation and a work ethic, but it doesn't automatically ensure a balance between the individual and the collective ambition. The world is full of players who are great yet disliked by their own team members for their selfishness on the field.
Individual sports undoubtedly drill some good traits into people. Team sports, under the right guidance and in the right environment, can build good character. But sports can just as well foster and harden bad character traits. A game cannot build a mind or a conscience.
RAJIV. M
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