Let me first say what needs to be said: There was one word that came to mind when I realized just how much of a hole I had dug upon the completion of my first run the afternoon of Friday, November 29th at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary, AB: “Damnit!”
Ha!
I can honestly chuckle at it now, because I have made time to recognize the importance of a moment in my career where I stumbled from my own perceived high.
Third sled off the line, the cheering was incredible … I pushed and loaded with as much force as I could find in my legs. However, a combination of dropping temperatures and an unsettled pilot – Phrixus and I couldn’t seem to keep our path as arrow straight as we wanted. Crossing the final timing eye – I was already more than 7 tenths behind the leader and in my sport that is an extremely tough gap to close on any track – so while I knew it certainly wasn’t impossible, it was not part of the initial game-plan I had imagined coming into the day….
The first World Cup of the 2013/14 season. My first ever home race of this caliber. Tons of friends and family had made the journey to watch LIVE! Maybe you were able to catch the live feed; perhaps you have watched the replay online – in either case – as always – you witnessed the fastest women in the world demonstrate what racing is all about!
I struggled with my own emotions upon returning to the top after the first heat. I swallowed hard and searched the deepest corners of my mind for the reminder I needed to literally and figuratively get back on track.
I decided to re-read a text sent to me a few days prior:
“You have to remember that what is being asked of you is superhuman. You are human. It’s good to check in with that side once and awhile. Cry, yell, curse; feel what you feel, because there is a Cassie under all of that spandex!”
It was what I needed to reset my focus and get back to business.
So while I walked out to the line, knowingly about to face a daunting task, I smiled.
The run would be better, not my best, watch the replay of heat 2 HERE ; but perfection is a rarity in any test of skill. I was proud that I didn’t let the negative thoughts entirely get the best of me … but I had difficulty hiding my disappointment in the overall race result.
10th place.
My heart – heavy; my mind – more so.
My family and friends were waiting at the top after I had placed Phrixus to recover in his travel case.
The love I was greeted with was so intense that it was practically palpable, and so each and everyone of you know: I couldn’t have asked for a more perfect cushion to land on! Thank you!
“When things go wrong, don’t go with them.” – Elvis Presley
There was initially very little time to mull over my performance. We were packed up and on a plane to Utah within 48 hours. To-do lists and goodbye hugs blurred into one massive moment and suddenly I was standing at the top of the Park City track in the middle of our 6 official training runs.
Now – here I am, the night before Race #2 – in the winter wonderland that is Park City. “Jack frost nipping at your nose” doesn’t even begin to describe how cold it has been here. When the digital read-out in the rental car says: -6 Fahrenheit … and I can’t even do the math … you just zip your coat ALL the way up; grin and bear it. 🙂
I have once again been drawn as racer no. 3. Men kick off the event at 9:04AM (MST) and the first woman will push her sled into the 15-curve track at 10:19AM.
My home is behind me; the world is ahead.
“The greatest glory in living lies not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall” –Nelson Mandela