I’ve been focusing so much time and energy on my work this season that there’s been little left for anything else. Working on my own skiing and on my continuing goals for my own skiing, free skiing for the pure love of it, my life outside of work and off the hill, and certainly my writing have all taken a back seat if not fallen off the wagon altogether. Thankfully, the results of my efforts and those of my staff at Sugarbush have paid off and by mid-April we’ll have had a great season as a resort and as a Ski & Ride School. Just as we are about to begin properly taking stock of it all and begin turning our attention to next year, the whirlwind of the past four weeks in particular has provided me with some truly inspirational moments that will to inform and energize me.
These last four weeks have included an amazing succession of events. Our resort had a very busy Presidents
Week followed immediately by a very busy Vermont schools vacation week. A few days later I made, a short trip to Montana (if there can be such a thing as a 'short trip to Montana') where
I participated in a truly remarkable conference alongside a small number of some of the leading lights the North American
snowsports teaching business. Shortly after returning home from the rarified air of the Rockies, I had a rigorous and stressful couple of days with the Eastern
Division of PSIA in the Catskill Mountains of New York. In between all of this,
I was able to watch my instructors at Sugarbush step up their game and continue to
provide exceptional lesson experiences for record numbers of guests in
some pretty harsh conditions, all in a way that makes me proud to be a ski instructor.
It’s been awesome (in the sense of being filled with awe as much as in the ‘Like, dude,
that’s totally awesome’ sense). It’s been exhausting. And it’s been genuinely
inspiring in ways big and small.
I am trying to be careful to not stop pushing myself and
those around me to achieve and to excel. Along those lines, it’s important to me personally that
I not commit the cardinal sin of complacency as a manager, though I have been
allowing myself to feel a little bit more confident lately that I’m steering
our school in the right direction. I have many big and thorny issues that continue
to challenge me as I write, and many of the changes that I began and issues I
uncovered when I started in September are ongoing and by no means resolved.
Still, tomorrow will be my second consecutive day off in what will be my first
five-day work week of the season, and I’ll make some turns in deep, dry, soft
snow, out of uniform and out of my office as this storm continues.
I do enjoy skiing in storms as much or more than I enjoy
skiing after they’ve gone. Tomorrow, with a significant amount of humility and
a smile on my face, I think I’ll permit myself to make my freeskiing in the fresh powder a small celebration, with the
falling snow feeling just a little bit like confetti being thrown to
mark the coming end of my first successful season at the helm. But I’ll do so
just long enough to make note of it before putting my foot back on the gas and looking
out to the horizon.
1 comment:
Skiing IN storms is powerful. I think many people actually thrive in them, when not resisting their energy. This morning, my yoga teacher said, "liberate yourself into potential." Similar line of thinking, I believe ... although the sweat running down my face in the hot yoga studio was more like rain than confetti! Congrats on a great first season Russ!
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