To anyone saying things like "it's just sport" etc... don't forget that for an athlete like Gracie, figure skating is her life. She started at age 8 or so, but most skaters start much younger, at 4, 3, or even 2 years of age. Then they sleep, breath, and eat figure skating. They don't go to regular high school (if they do, it's usually for the benefit of fluff pieces a la Sarah Hughes). They don't go out late with their friends. They train all day and focus their existence on the sport. They drop everything move all over the world for better training. Their daily lives are filled with a mixture of training, physical therapy, and resting, all so they can achieve maximum performance.
It's not so easy to separate life and sport when an athlete is fundamentally who you are, not just a description of what you do. The psychology is Olympic level athletes is different; their entire meaning system is founded at the altar of the Olympic rings. There is no alternative, there is no "life" outside of sport when you have lived in that bubble all of your life. Why the psychological weight of "failing" as an athlete is so heavy is that the sport/life divide is simply not applicable, and has not been since you were a very young child. In the words of Martha Graham, a dancer dies twice and the first death is the more painful.