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Vail closed the mountain before we could ski- but it wasn’t about skiing anyway

No Snow. No Powder. Just People.
You Show Up Anyway.

Last weekend, I attended Adaptive Spirit—an event my family has been part of for decades. I’ve volunteered for years. It’s a weekend in Vail that raises money for the U.S. Paralympic Ski, Snowboard, and Nordic Teams. It’s a weekend for skiing.

Except this year… we didn’t.

Vail closed the mountain two days before the event. There was no snow and the driest winter in 47 years.

We didn’t ski in Vail, but we showed up anyway, and that was for the better. This weekend isn’t really about skiing. It’s about grit, resiliency, the power of the human spirit and what happens after everything changes. People whose lives are split into before and after, and those who kept moving without a clear path back.

I sat with Andrew Kurka. At 13, an ATV accident severely damaged his spine. He became a monoskier and competed in World Cup races. He qualified for the US Paralympic team and in Sochi, he crashed and broke his back again.

Seriously? Again?! That’s where most stories stop but Andrew didn’t stop. He won gold and silver in PyeongChang and bronze in Cortina. Now he’s mentoring younger athletes.

No big speech about resilience. Just the work.

I spent time with Josh Sweeney: Marine Corps Scout Sniper in Afghanistan.

In 2009 he hit an IED and lost both of his legs. Some people would call that the end, but Josh found another way to serve his country; as a Paralympian. He medaled in gold in sled hockey in 2014 and recently won the gold in Italy for the biathlon relay.

Josh and his gold medal

And then there is Patrick Halgren, a silver medalist in Cortina. He looked at the patchy conditions in Vail and decided to hike up the ski hill. Patrick has one leg, and Vail is steep, but he hiked up anyway and skied down.

No crowd. No podium. No reason to do it other than the fact that he could.

And I realized something in spending time with people who keep getting up. It’s time to move forward, because I’ve been waiting:

Waiting for things to feel manageable.
Waiting for some version of normal to return.
Waiting for the last year to make sense.

It doesn’t.

There is no clean arc, no moment life resolves into something meaningful. Sometimes, things are not meaningful.

What is meaningful is what you do next, and rebuilding without a map.

It takes resilience to be resilient, but here’s what I’m starting to see: I can’t wait for things to feel right before I start moving. I can just start to move.

Maybe resilience isn’t something you feel.

Resilience is behavior:

when there’s no snow…
no powder…
no plan…

You go anyway.

Because staying still doesn’t change anything.

And in the end, it is never about the snow.

It is always about the people.

Featured

The no good, terrible, awful day.

My latest new word is terrible.

It rings well.

 The ‘T’ is sharp. It is significant without being confrontational,

The double r’s can be rolled if needed

And the last ‘ble’ leaves room for a long-winded ‘buulllll.’

Say it long…….tttttteerrrrribulllllllllll

Say it again: terrible, terrible, terrible.

It’s nice, isn’t it?

I posted on Tuesday that it was a terrible day.

Some days need to be terrible.

And that’s okay.

And thank you for those who have reached out regarding my cryptic Facebook post.

Tuesday was lined up to be a tough day. My Bro is struggling with his mitochondrial disease, and we were asked to attend a palliative care meeting.

It was election day.  

I had a big work meeting.

Sometimes, I feel the need to test myself emotionally. Responsible Heather will look at my schedule, tell me I have taken on a lot and suggest that I move some things around.

Hold my beer Heather will look at the schedule, say ‘Giddy Up’, fill up a 48 oz coffee thermos and roll out without any pants.

Getting these two to agree is a constant battle.

And then there is my Bro.

Lordy. If you ask my state of mind, I will pause, laugh, and say it’s terrible. My heart breaks for my brother.

I hate this disease.

The other day I told my husband, “I hate that we are here again.”

“But we never left,” he said.

It’s true. Bro’s mitochondrial symptoms emerged in 2008….almost 16 years ago when Sammers was still here…..the long and winding road.

We met on Tuesday at the Franklin Medical Center.

I have said this and will continue to say this…..Palliative Care Meetings at the hospital are the worst! The chairs are terrible, the Kleenex feels like cardboard, the bathroom stinks of antiseptic and poo.

Why can’t we meet at a pub and cry over fried pickles, chicken wings, and proper tissue?

No, we met in a sterile conference room on the 4th floor of the Franklin Medical Center. I marveled at my Bro and my SIL, explaining super-hard decisions, situations, and care for each. This disease is taking control of my Brother’s body, and we cannot pretend otherwise.

I held my Brother’s hand and cried.

I left declining lunch. I had a super important business meeting. I tried to pretend I was super important but really got in my car and cried (again).

For the record, crying in the car is the best. I recommend it quite often.

In my super important meeting, it was announced that we had lost a big client, a client of mine I’d held for seven months.

A client that was given to me with confidence and a side note, “This is yours, don’t f*ck it up.”

I lost it. I f*cked it up.

It’s hard when you f*ck things up.

I remember the first time I saw my Bro. He was swaddled on my grandparent’s bed. For all the times everyone promised me a fun baby brother or sister, he looked like a tiny little, squirmy walnut.

I was handed this tiny little person in 1974 with perhaps the same message, “Hello, Big Sister, here is your Baby Bro, don’t F*ck this up.”

I have two caveats: 1) it was 1974 and someone really might have said that while they served us a baloney sandwich and tossed us in the backseat of a station wagon with no seatbelts while singing John Denver. 2) I must pause and acknowledge that my last two posts have involved extensive use of the ‘F’ word….but stay with me

And hence, the terrible, awful Tuesday. I lost an account. I am losing my Brother.

What was crazy is that once I learned about the business account, I started crying. Sobbing. Stupid business that I had no control over, while I walked out of the palliative care meeting perfectly composed.

My friend put it in great perspective, “You can process losing an account, maybe everything about that day could be rolled into what you could process.”

I came home. I cried and held my husband, and then I went to Costco.

Have you ever been to Costco when you are really sad? I bought two puffy coats and twenty pounds of cheese. It was somewhat therapeutic. Come over any time- you will be warm and constipated.

I came home and watched Trump win. And I watched the Republicans take the Executive, Judicial, and Legislative Branch.

And my heart broke a little more

I say this knowing my audience, and many of my loves voted differently than I did.

I say this as a woman who gave birth to a stillborn baby, knowing now if I lived in places other than Colorado, I could have been convicted of murder.

I say this as a sister whose Brother has a rare disease, not knowing how we will support public health and rare disease research to a new cabinet that does not trust vaccines or science.

I say this as an auntie who will storm the field for my Littles.

I will be back. I am back. Yesterday I went to my OB/GYN. After a blood test, I was told I am now in menopause- so bring on the cats and the magic potions.

Tuesday was a terrible, awful day. But I know who I am. I know who I need to be. And in the words of Hold My Beer Heather…..Giddy Up.