SiteMap    RSS    Search
banner

CodeHeart Article

 You are here: Home>Fitness>Articles

How'd She Do It?

From:Internet   Author:Admin   Time:2007-04-19   Font: [big center small]  

Sept. 11, 2000 -- Remember the old adage that 90% of all accidents happen within a mile of home? Well, it's wrong. New evidence suggests that 90% of all accidents happen within a mile of Karen Smyers.

Three years ago Smyers was the defending U.S. Olympic Committee Female Triathlete of the Year. She was at the head of an elite pack of women, each vying for the honor of representing the United States this year in Sydney, when Women's Triathlon -- a race combining cycling, swimming, and running -- makes its official debut at the Olympic Games. She was 35 years old, in exquisite physical condition, and had never suffered a major injury or illness during her professional career. Unfortunately, her luck was about to change.

The change began in June 1997, one day before she was to leave for a triathlon in Monte Carlo. Smyers was replacing a storm window in her Lincoln, Mass., house when the glass suddenly shattered, slicing her leg so deeply that it severed her hamstring. Recuperating from the injury, Smyers missed the rest of the season. A little more than a year after the first accident, in August of 1998, she was finishing a training ride near her home when an 18-wheel truck clipped her. She tumbled off her bike and off the road, suffering six broken ribs, a lung contusion, and a third-degree shoulder separation. (In between these two accidents, she gave birth to a daughter -- delivered by cesarean section after 48 hours of labor.) In November of 1999 during a race in Ixtapa, Mexico, at the apex of another long comeback, Smyers took a second painful spill off her bicycle. Unable to avoid a fallen cyclist ahead of her, she careened off her own bike and fractured her collarbone.

"I always ask Karen if she ever broke a mirror or something like that," says Jill Newman, a friend of Smyers and fellow triathlete.

Smyers must occasionally ask herself the same question. In October of 1999, immediately after she placed second in the grueling Hawaii Ironman triathlon, she was diagnosed with cancer of the thyroid gland. Doctors operated two months later, removing the thyroid and two lymph nodes.

Nonetheless, she made it to the Olympic trials last May, the event that determined which two athletes would compete in the women's triathlon this month in Sydney. (She didn't make the team, finishing seventh.)

As the Olympics get under way, we'll be hearing a lot about the athletes who made it there. But what about Smyers and other competitors who'll be watching the games on television? How does a successful athlete cope with such a string of bad luck?

Overcoming Setbacks

Part of what drives Smyers onward is a trust in her own physical capabilities and strength. "The things I've learned from training and racing have helped me with my medical problems," she says. "It's given me faith that the body can bounce back. On days when you're totally exhausted from a workout, you learn that, with rest, you will get stronger."

Another part is patience. With every stumble, she has to take the time to heal and to retrain herself. "I'm learning that healing comes in incremental improvements," she says. "Just like you don't go from running three miles to doing a marathon overnight."

The rest is sheer iron-willed persistence: "I don't give up easily," says Smyers. "I'm sure that's part of how I've gotten through this." Such resolve makes sense for a triathlete, who must continually push past discomfort and exhaustion. Smyers has been able to apply her mental discipline to her sometimes slow and grueling medical rehabilitation. "It's not like a TV show," says her husband, independent film producer Michael King. "There's no epiphany, no 'Hey, this is working!' Rehab is kind of boring."

< Previous Page
1 | 2
Previous: The Greatest Workout on Earth   Next: Is Walking Enough?
wow gold wow power leveling wow power leveling wow power leveling
Registered Names and Trademarks are the copyright and property of their respective owners.
Copyright ©l 2007 CodeHeart Article.Ltd All rights reserved.