Abstract
Elite sport is widely celebrated as a model of human excellence. Yet beneath this idealizationlies a system that normalizes the suppression of vulnerability, the tolerance of harm, and the prioritization of performance over well-being. Drawing on systems psychodynamic theory, this essay argues that sport serves a broader cultural function by absorbing and legitimizing impulses such as aggression, domination, and emotional suppression that society struggles to acknowledge elsewhere. Athletes carry these burdens on the public's behalf, and when they refuse, the reaction can be fierce. These dynamics extend beyond sport and shape norms of excellence in business, medicine, and other high-stakes professions. The essay calls for forms of high performance that sustain both achievement and humanity.
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