interviews. They also reported using specific skills such as mindfulness of breath (to be present in the moment), healthier eating and exercise choices, and positive body image advocacy. Overall, they described a greater appreciation of themselves, both as athletes and women. These finding provide further
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Kim Gammage, Jeff Caron, Alyson Crozier, Alison Ede, Matt Hoffman, Christopher Hill, Sascha Leisterer, Sean Locke, Desi McEwan, Kathleen Mellano, Eva Pila, and Matthew Stork
“Negative Things That Kids Should Never Have to Hear”: Exploring Women’s Histories of Weight Stigma in Physical Activity
Garcia Ashdown-Franks, Angela Meadows, and Eva Pila
reliant on self-advocacy. As such, it is up to the individual to reclaim their diverse active body and overlooks the structural and systemic changes that must place to support inclusive physical activity environments. These individual acts of resistance align with existing literatures ( Dickins et
Locker-Room Experiences Among LGBTQ+ Adults
Shannon S.C. Herrick and Lindsay R. Duncan
institutions; subsequently, shifts toward transgender inclusion take time, advocacy, and work. As noted by Charlie, a 22-year-old Middle Eastern queer nonbinary individual, “trans spaces are precious and needed. I’m one of the few lucky ones because my university has a gender-neutral changing room. Students
North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity
North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity
provided to children and adults with ASD through school-based/early intervention services and community-based, physical activity programs offered by physical/occupational therapists as well as adaptive physical educators and creative movement/exercise experts. Greater motor advocacy and caregiver