đ§Ș Case Study 5.3: âIâm Not Sleeping Before Gamesâ
đ§Ș Case Study 5.3: âIâm Not Sleeping Before Gamesâ
Listening-First Care for Performance Anxiety Without Fixing, Preaching, or Diagnosing Too Fast
Learning Goals
By the end of this case study, you should be able to:
- Recognize performance anxiety patterns that often show up as sleep disruption in athletes and coaches.
- Respond with listening-first care that protects dignity and avoids âanswer-personâ ministry.
- Practice consent-based spiritual care (opt-in prayer and Scripture) in a sports setting.
- Apply safeguarding, confidentiality limits, and policy alignmentâespecially when minors are involved.
- Use boundary clarity to prevent role drift (chaplain â therapist, coach, trainer, investigator, or advocate for playing time).
- Build a support-circle plan and referral pathway without creating dependency.
1) Scenario: âThe Night Before Is the Worstâ
You serve as a volunteer sports chaplain connected to a local church and welcomed by a competitive athletic program. You attend practices occasionally, travel when invited, and keep a humble, âteam-firstâ posture. You are careful about safeguarding normsâespecially around minorsâand you coordinate respectfully with the coach, athletic director, and designated chaplain supervisor.
After practice, when teammates are milling around and several adults are still present, a junior starter lingers near the exit. They wait until others are slightly farther away and speak quietly:
âIâm not sleeping before games. Like⊠at all. Iâm up until 3 or 4. My stomach feels tight. I feel sick. Then Iâm exhausted and mad at myself. I canât tell coach. If I look weak, Iâm done.â
They glance around as if they regret speaking. Their voice is tight, like theyâre trying to stay âtoughâ while something is cracking underneath.
You can tell this isnât only about sleep. Itâs about fear, identity, and the cost of vulnerability in a competitive system.
2) Whatâs happening beneath the surface (what you are listening for)
In sports culture, sleep disruption before games can be the visible tip of a larger pressure load. Under the surface may be:
- Performance identity: âIf I fail, I am a failure.â
- Status fear: fear of being benched, cut, replaced, or losing respect.
- Shame: âI shouldnât feel this; something is wrong with me.â
- Body alarm: the nervous system stuck in âgame modeâ long after practice ends.
- Family pressure: spoken expectations (âweâre counting on youâ) or unspoken pressure.
- Social media exposure: fear of public ridicule after mistakes.
- Perfectionism: âAny mistake means I donât belong.â
- Hidden stressors: relationship conflict, grief, academic pressure, or family instability.
Your role is not to guess or label. Your role is to listen for the real story, protect dignity, and help the athlete take one wise next step within policy.
3) Your first priorities: safeguard, consent, and calm
A) Safeguarding check (especially if the athlete is a minor)
Because this is a youth context, you keep the conversation:
- in an observable space,
- within two-deep/nearby adult norms if required,
- not in a closed room, not in a car, not isolated.
This is not distrust. This is wisdom. Safeguarding protects the athlete and protects you.
B) Consent-based care
You do not âtake over.â You begin with consent and clarity:
- âThank you for telling me. Do you want me to listen for a minute, pray, or help you think about support?â
This single sentence prevents three common errors:
- fixing too fast,
- preaching too fast,
- diagnosing too fast.
C) Regulate yourself first
If the athlete feels your anxiety, they will shut down.
You lower your voice, slow your pace, and let calm lead.
4) The chaplain response: a step-by-step âin-laneâ approach
Below is a practical flow you can use in the moment.
Step 1: Validate without minimizing
You offer a short validation that honors their experience:
- âThat sounds exhausting.â
- âIt makes sense that your body feels tight if youâre carrying that kind of pressure.â
- âIâm really glad you told me.â
Validation does not mean approving every choice. It means acknowledging reality without shaming.
Step 2: Ask one gentle question that invites the real fear
You do not interrogate. You pick one doorway question:
- âWhatâs the strongest thought that hits you when you try to fall asleep?â
Or: - âWhat feels most at stake for you tomorrow?â
Often, the athlete answers with meaning-language:
- âIf I mess up, Iâll lose everything.â
- âI canât let them see me fail.â
- âIâm afraid Iâll disappoint my dad.â
- âIâm afraid coach will replace me.â
Now youâre listening to what the sleep problem is carrying.
Step 3: Clarify what they want from you
You return to agency:
- âDo you want prayer, listening, or help thinking through a next step?â
High-performers regain stability when they feel they have a choice.
Step 4: Offer a âtoday-sizedâ next step
You do not offer a big plan. You offer a today-sized step:
- âWhat would help most tonightâjust for tonight?â
- âWhatâs one small thing that would make sleep more likely?â
This keeps it realistic and non-clinical.
Step 5: Build a support circle (without creating dependency)
You do not become the secret keeper or the only support.
- âWho is a safe adult in your life who can support youâparent or guardian, a pastor, a school counselor?â
- âWould you be willing to tell one safe adult tonight that youâre not sleeping before games?â
If they hesitate, you do not pressure. You explore:
- âWhat makes that feel risky?â
- âWho feels safest?â
Step 6: Clarify confidentiality honestly (trust-building)
You use a calm, simple boundary sentence:
- âI will treat this with respect and protect your dignity. I canât promise total confidentiality if someoneâs safety is at risk, but I will share only what policy requires or what safety demands.â
This prevents later betrayal-feelings and shows integrity.
Step 7: Offer consent-based prayer or Scripture (opt-in)
You ask permission:
- âWould it help if I prayed a short prayerâright here?â
If yes, keep it short, steady, and non-performative. Example:
âLord Jesus, thank you for being near. Give peace tonight. Help this athlete remember they are loved beyond performance. Provide wise support and strength for tomorrow. Amen.â
If they want Scripture, keep it brief and fitting:
âCast all your worries on him, because he cares for you.â
â 1 Peter 5:7 (WEB)
Or:
âYahweh is near to those who have a broken heart.â
â Psalm 34:18 (WEB)
If they decline prayer or Scripture, you honor that without offense:
- âThank you for telling me. Iâm here.â
Step 8: Close with a follow-up plan that stays in your lane
You close with a simple follow-up:
- âIâll check in after the game.â
- âIf this gets worse or you feel unsafe, we need to bring in help right away.â
- âYou matterâwin or lose.â
5) Sample phrases to say (field-ready and trust-building)
Use short, calm phrases that lower pressure:
- âIâm here with you.â
- âThat sounds heavy.â
- âWhatâs been the hardest part?â
- âWhat do you need right nowâjust for today?â
- âDo you want me to listen, pray, or help you find support?â
- âThank you for trusting me with that.â
- âYou donât have to carry this alone.â
- âWould it help if I prayed a short prayerâright here?â
- âLetâs take one breath and one next step.â
- âIâll check in again. You matter.â
6) Sample phrases NOT to say (these often harm)
Avoid these, even if you mean well:
- âJust relax.â
- âStop overthinking.â
- âItâs not a big dealâeveryone gets nervous.â
- âYou just need more faith.â
- âGod did this to teach you something.â (especially too soon)
- âYou have anxietyâhereâs what that means.â (diagnosing/labeling)
- âDonât tell anyone; just tell me.â (dependency + safeguarding risk)
- âIâll talk to coach for you.â (role drift; may undermine trust and policy)
7) Boundary map reminders (stay in your role)
Limits
You are not a therapist or medical provider. You are not the athleteâs 24/7 crisis line.
Access
Safeguarding norms: observable settings, appropriate adult proximity, policy-aligned communicationâespecially with minors.
Pace
Do not dig for trauma details. Do not press for more than they offer.
Authority
Do not influence playing time, roster decisions, scholarships, or internal discipline.
Safety
If you hear credible risk of self-harm, abuse, exploitation, or imminent dangerâfollow policy and get appropriate help immediately.
8) Decision point: when to refer or escalate
Refer (support circle + care resources) when:
- the pattern is ongoing (weeks/months),
- sleep loss is severe,
- the athlete is increasingly panicked or shut down,
- there are signs of depression, severe anxiety, or substance coping,
- family conflict is significant,
- the athlete lacks a safe adult support system.
Escalate per policy when:
- there is risk of harm to self or others,
- abuse/exploitation/coercion is disclosed or suspected,
- hazing or harassment involves credible threat,
- safety is compromised in travel or team contexts.
A chaplain phrase that protects dignity:
- âBecause I care about you, we need to involve the right help. Weâll do this with you, not against you.â
9) A wise ending to the moment (what it can sound like)
You end with calm dignity:
âThank you for trusting me. You are not alone. You matter beyond tomorrowâs performance. Letâs take one breath and one next step. Iâll check in after the gameâand letâs make sure you have a safe adult supporting you too.â
This is ministry of presence, not ministry of control.
Reflection + Application Questions
- What is the first sentence you would say in this scenario that communicates safety and consent?
- Name two ways this athleteâs fear might be tied to performance identity rather than just sleep.
- Write your one-sentence confidentiality clarity statement (policy-aligned).
- Which âWhat Not to Sayâ phrase are you most tempted to use? What will you say instead?
- How would you build a support circle here without creating dependency?
- What are two red-flag indicators that would require referral or escalation in your setting?
- Draft a short, consent-based prayer you could use in this scenario (2â3 sentences).
Academic References (credible foundations for this case)
- Christina Maslach & Michael P. Leiter, The Truth About Burnout: How Organizations Cause Personal Stress and What to Do About It (Jossey-Bass, 1997).
- Michael Kellmann (ed.), Enhancing Recovery: Preventing Underperformance in Athletes (Human Kinetics, 2002).
- David Fletcher & Mustafa Sarkar, peer-reviewed work on stress and resilience in sport (commonly cited in sport psychology literature).
- Andrew D. Lester, The Listenerâs Way: Story, Theory, and Practice in Pastoral Counseling (Westminster John Knox Press, 1995).
- Carl R. Rogers, On Becoming a Person (Houghton Mifflin, 1961).