I love the Olympics. Winter, summer, every single games, I tune in.
I love it because we see how sports bring us together.
I love it because we are reminded that sports are the ultimate equalizer. Look at weightlifting in the summer Olympics or downhill skiing now. The weights and the mountain donโt care what country you come from, how much money you have, or what religion you are. The weights and the mountain are the same for every single competitor.
I love it, most of all, because the Olympics remind us of a core life lesson: greatness and heartbreak live right next door to each other.
You canโt find greatness without a few meetings with heartbreak and failure.
We saw this very clearly over the weekend.
Like many of you, Iโve been following my friend Lindsey Vonnโs inspirational comeback. Sheโs 41, one knee is completely rebuilt, and now she went into the Olympics with a freshly-torn ACL.
As storylines go, you canโt get any better. It is gutsy. It is brave. It is a little bit crazy.
And it brings out all of the losers to do their naysaying.
โWhy would she do this?โย
โShe must be missing something in her life.โ
โItโs irresponsible.โ
What these people donโt understand, because theyโve never tried anything great, because theyโve never pushed themselves to the absolute edges of their limits, because theyโll never know their real potential, is that there is no such thing as risk-free greatness.
Yesterday, when her Olympic dreams ended in that horrible crash that left all of us praying for her in front of our televisions, the haters were out in full force.
I donโt need to repeat it. Twitter has given losers enough of a platform; I wonโt be amplifying them in this newsletter.
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