The social value of psychomotor intervention and its compatibility with Adlerian thought

Authors

  • Fede Sartoris Chicco

Keywords:

clumsy child, motor development stage of childhood, holism, organization, psychomotor skills, socialization, space-time, piaget, body schema, spitz, wallon

Abstract

Psychological interventions in sport are generally aimed at optimizing athletic performance (autogenic training, etc.), while athletes should also be considered as individuals, often in need of real psychotherapeutic support. The choice of a sport may be made to compensate for parental frustrations, to acquire a social role, or due to fashion and media influences. The imposition of a sport, hypercompetitiveness, and obsessive training can lead to distancing oneself from it, but also to real psychopathologies. In addition to studying the athlete's personality, the sports psychologist must also be interested in the inferiority that is compensated for by sport, the aggression that is manifested or controlled by it, and its symbolic value, which is often unconscious. Sport is a pedagogical tool and improves cooperation, but it is also teleologically geared towards the pursuit of the subject's goal and reveals the position he or she takes towards life. By taking care of the person, there will also be an improvement in their sporting performance. This is demonstrated by the reported cases of a hyperactive and self-defensive 9-year-old boy, an 18-year-old who neurotically seeks fictitious compensation in sport, and a 40-year-old who uses sport to reassure himself and assert himself socially

Published

2025-08-21