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I Used to Ski: Thoughts on How to Reconcile Your Past

By Ilene Marcus February 03, 2024 Mindset

Right after Thanksgiving, in the Northeast USA the temperature drops precipitously. It’s ice cold outside. As I step out of my warm cozy home, the best place I have ever lived, onto a newly planked landing, looking at one of the best cars I have ever owned, in my favorite mink coat with rosettes on the bell sleeves (cause it’s that cold); en-route to meet friends for coffee, the best friends I have ever had, my first thought when the chilly air hits my face is: I’m glad I am not on a ski lift!

The truth is, where I live, there are no gondolas or enclosed lifts. Being whisked to the top of the mountain is not a magic ride. No special occasion needing long fancy dresses, sporty rental car and hotel suites overlooking the ocean with 3 bathrooms. In my past everyday life, there was just the barebones steel wobbly 2-chair lift. It’s time to be honest with myself about why I don’t ski anymore.

Swooshing down the slopes with the sun shining down, the clean white snow punctuated by the greenest trees and the bluest skies. Counting on your body to hold you, propel you. Your mind and body – one. Making every cell align and feeling happy, exhilarated, free, at peace. No drugs, no alcohol, no help. Naturally leaning left or right, bending my knees, placing my poles in the deep soft snow, gliding down the hill in a graceful linking s-pattern. Digging deep into a tight mogul. Skiing was one of my life’s greatest pleasures.

I stopped because of the clothes. No matter how much I spent or how much weight I lost, they didn’t keep me warm or fit right. Halfway down the mountain, I would twist and something would shift either binding me or exposing a patch of skin, that didn’t need exposure.

My arthritis and the years of wear and tear made the ski boots uncomfortable. The other people on the hill got faster – or did I get slower? And once the trails were co-mingled with snowboarders, navigating was hard work akin to changing lanes in a six-lane highway. I missed the backroads. And what rant about the state of skiing today would be complete without complaining about the parking situation. Mushy, muddy, deep iced ruts. Getting through the parking lot, I always wished I had obstacle course training and could afford a valet.

So why do I have to come to grips with the statement: I used to ski?

Process the Loss

For many years, I have not let myself think this deeply about why I loved skiing. Honestly, I started this blog post three years ago to the date. I moved to this town because it was a 12-minute drive to the mountain. And the mountain is everything. I see it going and coming into town. When it gets cold, before the first snow, late at night, the sound of the blower never fails to excite me.

The promise of skiing filled me with joy. I started skiing before I was 13 years old. I skied for 40 years. How come it is no longer in my life? How could my body betray me like this? When did my equipment get so old? When did it become too much effort to do something I love?

It was too painful for me to think about. It wasn’t just the skiing. It was the friends I shared the weekends with, my daughter relying on me and a weekend so different from my every day, that it reinforced me for a hard week.

Revisit Revisionist History

When I break up or lose a lover or friend or family, I tend to have revisionist history. I only see black and white. I only feel it was all good or all bad. Usually, I remember the version that allows me to continue to mourn the loss and beat myself up. My internal monologue goes like this:

Why didn’t I appreciate them when they were in my life? It’s all my fault. Why did I start asking for what I need?

I don’t remember how they took advantage of me or loved to pick fights and were always (and I mean black and white always) running late. I remember only the good parts. No more.

My memory of skiing was all good. I loved it. My pants always fit, I was never cold, I raced down the hill like Suzi Chapstick, and all was right with the world.

I think there is a reason our hair turns gray. To remind us that life is just like that. It’s in the muted tone, the everyday, the realness that we find peace.

Accept Two Divergent Thoughts

The hallmark of being older and living without regret for me is being able to hold two complicated thoughts. Such as, I loved skiing and hated the cold. Or, swishing down the mountain, I felt free and yet carrying all that equipment was exhausting. And then, the breath of fresh air as I gathered speed was exhilarating, and the long wait on the lift line exhausting.

Being able to hold these two thoughts keeps me balanced and better able to look back on my life with deep gratitude.

Get the Balanced View

Now I force myself to write a list. Two simple columns. Usually, on a bright yellow or pink sticky note. Sometimes I use a frilly heart shaped pad so I remember to love myself. On the left, I list what was great. On the right, what sucked. No sugarcoating, no long sentences. Just the facts, Ma’am.

Writing it down forces me to see it. To come face-to-face with the assessment I keep making in my head but never changing in my heart and keep saying, one day, one day. I needed to change that narrative.

Today was that day. I walked into the cold air and said, “I’m glad I’m not on a ski lift.” It’s the first day I didn’t beat myself up about not skiing.

Once the “it sucks” column gets longer than the “it’s great column,” I know I have to change my ways. And when I forget and start getting angry and mad at myself that I no longer do something I love, I can spend time, looking for the list and once I find it, being grateful for the memories.

Pro Tip: Use one notebook for these musings. Or create a file on your computer or a note on your phone. The easier it is to find them, the more you look at them, the more you will remember to have the balanced view. For me, that changed everything.

Be Honest, Even When You Don’t Want To

The truth is that I probably couldn’t ski if I wanted to. I am not in shape. And that was even before the pandemic. All the way up to my 40s I stayed in pretty good shape no matter the pounds I packed-on. And before ski season, extra wall squats, getting those thighs stronger than ever to go all day long, up and down the mountain, up and down the moguls, up and down from falling. At age 60 I was no longer even close to being in shape.

And there’s more. When the pandemic hit, people had to make a reservation for the lift. That was way too much pressure for me. What if I wanted to linger longer over my coffee, the dog needed extra time or I just couldn’t get out of bed – all possible and real scenarios. I mean, how long would it take me to get my tight ski pants on anyway? The truth for me today is, I’m just happy I can get down the steps and to the car without breaking my other hip. Having to get to a ski line appointment just isn’t something I am willing to tackle.

Know Your Body’s Current State and Ability

If you were reading carefully, you noticed I said, “get down the steps without breaking my other hip.” Yup, one of my hips was replaced at age 46. I like to tell everyone it was a ski accident. Then I break the news, it happened the night before, in the slippery sliding parking lot at the lodge. The truth is, skiing compounded the lack of cartilage in my hip, after pounding down moguls year after year. The high heels I lived in didn’t help, and the years of walking on sprained ankles compensating with my hip was a recipe for disaster.

Know your body’s current ability. One of the downfalls of my skiing career was that when I bought my last new pair of ski boots and all the supporting equipment, I chose what I would have skied best in when I was in my 20s and 30s. Fast blades, with a deep wood core and racing stance. That wasn’t what my body could handle anymore. Instead of me riding the skis, they were riding me. It was scary.

What’s Next

Enjoy what you are doing now, like walking barefoot, shoveling the snow, because not being able to do it, may be just around the corner. You know, I used to be quite the skier.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Is there an activity that you were good at but have had to give up? What did that feel like? What was the reason for giving up that activity or hobby?

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Neale

Your article has really helped me start to understand why I’ve moved several times in the past 7 years; from the northeast, then to the south and now halfway back up the East Coast. When my adult children moved to another continent, our home of 30 years was no more so I searched for my new home as a single empty nester. Taking in all of the pros and cons of my previous homes, I feel that I am home now. Thank you!

Sue Maule

I found this article at just the right time. After a few years of some unpleasant physical and emotional issues, I now have fibromyalgia. It’s hit me like a truck! The limitations this illness puts on me means that I’m struggling so much with acceptance of how my life is now. I have to find a new way to ‘be me’. I’m seeing a lovely therapist and am attending a support group but it’s so hard. I use to love hiking and dancing…..

Felicia

I get it! I’m 66 and still ski, though not at the same level that I could handle at 60. I lived in Tahoe for years, worked the part-time ski job for the free pass, and mostly made my turns mid-week to avoid the weekend onslaught of tourists. In 2020, everything changed. I broke my back after catching an edge my second day out. I wore a back brace for three months. Then the pandemic hit and skiing changed. I got a fairly serious case of covid in December of 2020, then a few months later I was diagnosed with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia. While not necessarily a death sentence, that and long covid caused so much fatigue and respiratory issues that skiing just wasn’t doable. I finally decided to return to the mountain last winter. Putting on the boots and schlepping my equipment to the lifts was a struggle. I skated to the lifts like it was 2018 and was pleasantly surprised. I started out slow and easy and muscle memory responded. I quickly moved to blues and did a black. I’m definitely slower, and become unnerved when some young hotdogger nearly races across my tails or cuts me off. But planting my pole, creating that rounded turn then linking them again and again down the trail continues to fill me with delight. I’m working my way back to smaller moguls. Not sure if I’ll be able to do the tougher black or double black diamonds again, but as long as skiing still fills me with glee, I’ll put up with the boots and the schlepping! At least I’m still rocking my ski pants!
Thank you for reminding when to keep skiing and when to hang up my boots for the last time (and switch to snowshoes full-time!).

Holly Schmitz

Your article brings back so many memories! I started skiing when 14. At 18 moved to New England and skied for 50 years where I lived in MA, NH, VT, CT, RI. I even worked in a ski store so I could ski for free on Sundays. At 59 I moved to WA because windsurfing became my obsession. It had the same thrill with less pain from falling in the water and weather usually much nicery. Winters were spent in Baja for even more windsurfing! When we returned to WA in the spring I loved skiing Mt. Hood with much sunshine, 40 minute drive from our house, no crowds during the weekdays, open and long runs. MUCH nicer conditions than New England!

After twelve years of this we moved to central coast of CA because we adopted my grandson when he was 9. He couldn’t attend Baja school because he didn’t speak English. So we solld our homes and moved near the ocean in Central CA. Now skiing is at least a 6 hour drive and soooooooooo expensive. Four years ago we went to Mammoth for a 5-day ski vacation and it was great. However the last day as I was heading down to call it a day ….. a snowboarder hit me so hard that I took a terrible fall. I had a concussion (even wearing a helmet). I woke up looking at the ski patrol and being asked what year it was. I recovered and intended to ski again, but the long distance, high cost , getting a divorce months after all this, etc. has kept me from going. Also the weather is so nice here that I don’t really want to leave for the cold mountain.

I’m certainly not a quitter. Since age 40 I tore both ACLs, had 7 subsequent knee surgeries, a knee replacement — and yet I always went back for the joy of skiing. Guess the distance, cost and no longer being married to my ski companion have kept me from the slopes lately. Still I never say never, I last windsurfed in Baja when visiting a year ago. I was planning another trip there this month, but now I haveLlong Covid. Six weeks of being tired all the time and able to do very little have left me unable to do all the fun things I love to do — even tennis or going dancing!! I keep telling myself that someday I’ll feel better. I’m almost 77 and not ready to throw in the towel! Holly

Ilene

Those snowboarders! Yes, we are not quitters. We are “ Evolving” into something else!

Felicia

I skied Mt. Hood once in June of 2016…lapped Palmer Field, waxing my boards every five runs! I hope to move back to Washington and ski there or maybe Baker. I lived in Santa Barbara for five years, and the drive to Mammoth was really long (it was easier driving there from Tahoe). I’m sorry to hear about your accident with the snowboarder. A good friend that I once taught with was hit by a snowboarder while she was teaching class. She was badly injured and never taught again unless we teamed up for informal teaching sessions for some friends of hers. We still both love to ski, but the crowds, expense, and crazy (and often drunk or high) skiers/snowboarders take the fun out of the sport. I miss Tahoe when it was fun and affordable to ski there. I wouldn’t consider moving back now. Enjoy the coast!!

Sue Maule

Oh my goodness, this article came up at just the the right time for me! I’m 63 and in the last 3 years I’ve had cancer (surgery, chemo and currently no sign of it 🤞), sepsis, covid (twice), I fell down the stairs and broke my ankle, tripped over getting out of my car and had facial injuries and broke a bone in my hand (the left one, I’m left-handed) and last year was diagnosed with fibromyalgia. As a result of everything I can’t a lot of things I used to love doing and I just don’t know how to be me anymore. I know now that I have to discover other ways of being me and it really helped to read this article. Thank you so much 🩷

Ilene

Sue – thank you so much, isn’t it crazy how when it rains it pours. Thanks for sharing – you are incredible!! Ilene

The Author

Ilene Marcus, MSW, MPA, is the author of Managing Annoying People and runs Aligned Workplace, speaking and training Leaders and Founders to attract and retain great employees. An emerging literary writer, her goal is to make you smile just a bit more. Please visit her website at Alignedworkplace.com.

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