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I tore my ACL skiing and Lindsey Vonn taught me an unexpected lesson
Summary
A cancer survivor who tore her ACL describes how Lindsey Vonn’s Olympic fall and resilience helped her regain confidence and return to bolder skiing.
Content
The author writes about how a personal ACL tear on the slopes connected to Lindsey Vonn’s recent fall at the Winter Olympics. Vonn fell in the downhill race and, the piece reports, was diagnosed with a complex tibia fracture and later had a third surgery. The writer is a cancer survivor who used skiing as part of her recovery and says fear slowed her return to the sport. Seeing Vonn compete and then fall helped the author reframe risk and reclaim more confident skiing.
What the piece reports:
- The author tore her left ACL while skiing and later underwent surgery and rehabilitation.
- The writer is a survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma and used skiing as a way to regain physical freedom after treatment.
- Lindsey Vonn fell during the Olympic downhill race, was reported to have a complex tibia fracture, and had a third surgery.
- The author says Vonn’s determination and comeback influenced her choice to ski more boldly, including finishing a black diamond run.
Summary:
The essay links personal recovery from cancer and an ACL injury with the public story of an elite athlete’s fall and surgery, emphasizing how examples of perseverance can affect individual choices. Undetermined at this time.
