Olympic Men and
Women to Machines
OLYMPIC MEN
AND WOMEN TO MACHINES
By
Courtney Pierce
From daring
feats to digital art to drones. My voyage of watching the Olympics over the
past forty-five years has followed our progression as humans to a non-human
age. We held our breath; our eyes filled with pride and tears, but this time
around I watched in fear as these young men and women pushed their bodies to
feats programmed on computer models, devised no less by BMW.
But even rocks
crack. Witness the decision by Russian skater, Evgeni Plushenko, who inched
away from the men’s skating competition because his health was more important than
winning another medal. I was riveted.
Photo: Mashable.com |
I love the
emotion of the Olympics. Hundredths of a second separate a hero from a zero,
our new measurement of human achievement. Olympic emotion, though, was mostly relegated to the backstory segments, such as those of the U.S. team members, Amanda Bird and Gus
Kenworthy, who rescued stray dogs in Sochi
to bring them home for a better life. Or the Canadian free skier, Alex Bilideau, taking
on air to please his brother with Cerebral Palsy, his true hero. Those are the
heart-felt moments we watched off the ice that allowed us to connect as humans.
Remember when millions
of women wanted a Dorothy Hamill haircut? We didn't watch the counter; we
watched Dorothy. She exuded personality.
And who would
dare whack the knee of Nancy Kerrigan, America ’s skating sweetheart? One
of our own skater’s entourage stood under the camera lights for that
unthinkable act in 1994. The stakes rose. Do anything to win. Nancy went on the ice, buoyed with charged
emotion from the fans, and won a silver medal. My own knee ached as I watched. Like a thriller, we
wanted the bad guy to go down.
Photo: Nextgov.com |
This year, I became
fascinated with the strange mechanical shadows as skiers soared to new heights on
their snowboards in baggy pants. They were drones. The little flying machines recorded the faces in the
crowds and followed the Olympians should there be an act of terror. I get it,
but geez. Empty seats. Globalization is kind of immobilizing, the opposite
result of its goal. Many were too afraid to go to Sochi because of media-infused threats.
There are still
thrills and spills to fascinate us. Comcast even had an on-demand selection for
those moments on cable: Olympic light. But then my cynicism vanished as the figure skater, "Queen" Yuna Kim of South Korea, sailed across the ice in a near-flawless performance that dropped my jaw with its beauty. Wow! So young to exhibit such mature grace. Yuna didn't seem real.
Photo: Jackson Hole News & Guide |
My uncle, Harry
Baxter, has been a professional skier since 1938. He didn't make it to the Olympics
due to the war in Korea .
A hero of a different kind, but an Olympian nonetheless. After more than seventy
years on skies, Harry still competes and instructs young hopefuls to be their best. He does
it with my bionic aunt, Martha. A major ski event has been named after Uncle
Harry: The Harry Baxter Challenge. And in January, 2014, he won his category at
the age of eight-four. (Yes, that's a photo of my uncle on his latest winning run!)
Will Evgeni Plushenko
be skating at eight-four? I wonder and worry since he experienced so much pain
in his final Olympic moments. My uncle is both a hero and
a star while he continues to ski. But more than that, Harry’s an example for
human athletes in the future: Achieve, live a full life, and continue to follow
your passion. The Olympic spirit shouldn't stop at thirty when sponsorship fizzles and fans have gone home to hibernate for four years.
What heartens me is what happens after these Olympics. Some 2014 athletes will come
home with rescued canine orphans, give back to the families and friends who
supported their journey, and inspire young athletes to be better than they ever
dreamed . . . and thrill us with their backstories four years from now.
Here’s to the
true Olympic spirit!
Courtney Pierce
is a fiction writer living in Milwaukie ,
Oregon . After a twenty-year
career as an executive in the Broadway entertainment industry, she switched her
focus from the magic of theater to her passion for writing. Courtney is
currently in the Hawthorne Fellows program at the Attic Institute and is Vice President
and board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association (NIWA). Her
short story, 1313 Huidekoper Place , was published
in the 2013 NIWA Anthology of Speculative
Fiction. Her first two novels of a trilogy, Stitches and Brushes,
follow the trail of two sleuthing boomers who want a little magic in their
lives—and magic what they get when they find a mysterious artifact at an estate
sale. Her third book of the trilogy, Riffs,
will be published in 2014. For more information, visit Courtney’s blog:
www.stitchesthenovel.blogspot.com.
2 comments:
I'm with you, Courtney. I absolutely love the Olympics! Thanks for this article that brought back lots of memories of the recent games and those of years past.
Great post Courtney! I'm afraid I missed the last Olympics but I'll make an effort for the next one...
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