Thursday, April 16, 2020
Michelle Kwan Olympian Gives Her Best Career Advice
Michelle Kwan Olympian Gives Her Best Career Advice In the decade after Michelle Kwan was forced to withdraw from the 2006 Winter Olympics due to a severe injury, the legendary figure skater has accomplished a lot off the ice. A board member of the Special Olympics, a diplomat and once a coordinator for Hillary Clintonâs 2016 presidential campaign, Kwan told MONEY she has not stopped following her passions â" a career move that has been greatly aided by the lessons she learned while ice skating. But you donât have to be an Olympic medalist or World Champion figure skater to learn those lessons. Indeed, Kwan said playing any kind of sport can be the secret to success. âI would encourage people to participate in sports,â Kwan told MONEY this week. âYou donât have to dream of being an Olympic or a professional athlete.â Kwan cited a recent study that found a hefty majority of executives play or have played some kind of sport â" particularly with women in C-suite level positions. An overwhelming majority, 96%, of the women surveyed by Ernst Young said they played sports. While Kwan is best known to Americans for her legacy on the ice, she said she has faced a number of hardships while a competitive figure skater that have informed her career today. There were the times she fell during a routine in front of millions of viewers. Or when she didnât quite capture that Olympic gold, including the time she took home the silver instead of gold at the 1998 Olympics in Nagano, Japan, where she was favored to win. After competing in the Olympics twice, Kwan went on to earn her undergraduate and graduate degrees and became a diplomat for the United States as a public advocacy envoy through the U.S. State Department. Kwan is currently working on the 2019 World Summer Games through the Special Olympics in Abu Dhabi. Kwan said the setbacks she experienced on the world stage at the Olympics only made her hardships during graduate school at Tufts University several years later more manageable. âThatâs the grit and perseverance that you learn in sports that is a life lesson,â Kwan said. âWhen I was in grad school, I thought that was how you fall â" but you donât fall in front of thousands of people, and you learn from your mistakes.â âAs an athlete thatâs something I always take with me,â she added. âYou fall every day, whether itâs in a job, or you miss something else, but you learn how to do it better next time. You learn it in sports. Thatâs a life lesson.â USA's skater Michelle Kwan skates during the first night of the Women's short program in Figure Skating at the Salt Lake Ice Center in Salt Lake City, Utah Tuesday February 19, 2002 during the XIX Winter Olympics. (Photo by Anacleto Rapping/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Anacleto Rappingâ"LA Times via Getty Images As MONEY has reported, competing in sports at a young age could help people develop essential leadership skills and confidence that can help in their careers outside of the sport. Additionally, studies detailed by MONEY have shown former athletes make more than non-athletes in the workplace. Certainly, however, being able to compete in sports like ice skating for Kwan did have a lot to do with resources and access. Kwan, the daughter of Hong Kong immigrants in California, said her family struggled financially, and made sacrifices for her to achieve her dreams. Kwan specifically pointed to her mother, who not only helped support her goal financially when she asked to start taking private skating lessons at the age of seven, but also encouraged her to stay strong when she felt lonely. âThe biggest lessons I learned were probably the times where I had the biggest setbacks and the biggest challenges â" when I had the biggest jumps forward and lessons learned,â said Kwan, who has partnered with Procter Gamble for the companyâs latest version of its âThank You, Momâ campaign, ahead of the 2018 Olympics in Pyeongchang. âEven at a young age when you start to do well, itâs tough because itâs lonely on top, and I wasnât the most popular. Itâs having that advice from your mom that âYou can do it, just stay focused. People are going to be jealous, but donât let that distract you from what you want to achieve.ââ
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