Too Little Time to Hate
Call me crazy, but I think that the opportunities offered by snowboarding, skiing, and other wintertime activities are too enjoyable to worry about how other people enjoy them.
Even as we wind down snowboarding’s third decade, the alleged feud between skiers and snowboarders still gets press. (Sometimes the attitudes are in fact not friendly; witness some online discussions when Taos Ski area announced that it would open its terrain up to snowboarders.)
But here’s something I was not aware of: an anti-snowboarder sentiment within snowboarding. Perhaps naive, I was surprised how vulgar and anti-human at least one expression of this sentiment was.
Karine Ruby won the first Olympic gold medal in snowboarding, at the 1998 games. In the words of one recent article about her, she became “the most decorated female snowboarder in the world, with 2 Olympic medals, 6 world championship titles and 67 snowboard World Cup victories.”
Unfortunately, that article was her obituary in the New York Times. On a mountain climb, she fell 70 feet to her death.
The Times included one passage that some people might find incendiary. Here it is:
“‘In the snowboarding world, she was an unavoidable icon,’ Joel Franitch, the French Skiing Federation’s director of snowboarding, said in a telephone interview. ‘It’s a huge loss for the sport.”
Did you see the offending text? “French Skiing Federation.”
What gives?
Here’s the answer. The Olympic games are run by the International Olympic Committee, or IOC. For each sport, the IOC picks which governing body sets the rules for who can participate. When the IOC decided it wanted to have snowboarding in the games, it had to pick which organization to deal with. There was an existing organization for snowboarders, but the IOC instead picked FIS, the worldwide skiing organization. That move provoked some anger among snowboarders, and the world’s leading snowboarders refused to participate.
Over 20 years later, a few people are not willing to let that sleight go, as revealed by the following conversation I had on Twitter with a party I’ll call “AS.” My comments are preceded by “GOT.” I’ve done some editing, if you can’t tell.
AS: honestly was Karine Ruby a f—ing saint or something? Her skis were stuck together and called a snowboard
GOT: Karine Ruby a saint? No. But she was a pioneer, champion snowboard racer, etc. Too much anger there? Why?
AS: pioneer of what keeping snowboarding in the ski genre? Racing isn’t snowboarding, she’s dead people deal with it
GOT: Still mad about the role of FIS? You *are* an angry dude. I beg to differ: snowboarders *can* race.
GOT: BTW, remembering someone’s contributions and life is in fact a way of dealing with death. Is that a problem?
AS: hard booting carvers are nothing more than spandex wearing wannabe skiers that couldn’t hack it ski racing
AS: also how many people knew and remembered her before she died? These are the same people that suddenly cry about it, that’s sad
GOT: Spandex ain’t my thing either, but live and let slide, I say.
And I still do. I’m not a hardbooter, though I’m intrigued by it and may try it out sometime. I seldom watch snowboarding or skiing events (for one thing, they’re hard to find on TV), but I do think that the death of anyone who has accomplished something and has a lot of life ahead of them is a sad, and a loss to many people. No man is an island, and all that.
So whatever you enjoy doing on the snow, do it, enjoy it, and be grateful for the opportunity to do it. And don’t hate. Save your energy for something productive.
June 8, 2009 @ 12:55 am
It's pretty easy to take a few responses on twitter and bend it into your favor. Anyone can actually do that.