engelberg_magazin_nummer17_winter

Die Älplermagronen ihrer Mom mag Dominique Gisin am liebsten.

Dominique loves her mum’s Älplermagronen, Swiss macaroni cheese.

However many times Dominique Gisin got knocked down, she sprang right back up again; she is a passionate athlete whose unwavering optimism has been put to the test time and again. But she was in love with her sport, with the freedom of skiing, and with the beauty of the mountains. This love and dedication helped Dominique persevere until she clinched a huge victory – the Olympic gold medal in Sochi. All this, despite enough injuries to fell at least three top athletes. “That ’s why complete strangers em- braced me af terwards.” Dominique had crashed on the f ina l jump in Vancouver – a bit ter defeat, as her split times had been good enough for a place on the po- dium. A pensive look f lickers across her dark brown eyes as she casts her mind back. And then she goes straight back to laughing. She is a natura lly cheer f u l sou l who has a lso seen the dark side. For ever y high there is a low; she knows that there will a lways be obstacles in your path that you have to clear away. “But ever y time we thought it was in the bag, the nex t obstacle wou ld be waiting,” Dominique smiles wr yly, remembering the cha llenges she had to face. She struggled and she suf fered, she ruth lessly hunted down her own failings, and, above a ll else, she never gave up. She injured her right knee, lef t knee, meniscus, ligaments and kneecap, and she a lso had concussion. For a while, she considered ca lling it a day. “But af ter two weeks even my mum said that I shou ld get up and tr y again, a lthough she had suf fered a long with me. I just cou ldn’ t live without Dominique reca lls the weeks following her v ic tor y. “That may sound arrogant, but it was because they knew so much about me. I was deeply touched.” Four years earlier,

skiing.” Nor cou ld she live without her mum’s Ä lplermagronen, Swiss macaroni cheese. Dominique’s love for the spor t is un- diminished now that she has retired f rom professiona l skiing. The 30-year-old enjoys hit ting the deep powder snow and the slopes of Engelberg. But she will on ly be able to do that on the weekends, as she is currently study ing physics in Zurich. She had tried to combine her studies with her spor ts career, but there just weren’ t enough hours in the day for both. She sometimes missed team meetings when she

was tied to her desk tr y ing to tack le a maths problem. Besides skiing, f ly ing is now her greatest passion – even more than golf or running on the K lostermat te – and she got her private pilot ’s licence

Dominique Gisin enjoys hitting the snow-covered slopes of Engelberg.

four years ago. Dominique announced her re- tirement f rom competitive skiing in an aircraf t hangar in Méribel – the per fec t set ting for a young pilot who is obsessed with f ly ing and has a poster of the Swiss Air Force on her wa ll. Dominique stepped of f the slope and straight onto a plane, beginning her new life af ter professiona l spor t – as a student, a pilot, a suppor ter of the Red Cross, and even as an author. “Because I’ d been asked so many times how I manage to keep my- self motivated, my spor ts psychologist and I decided to write a lec ture about it,” she says. Dominique hadn’ t planned to publish a book until she rea lised there was a demand for one following the lec tures. There are now 2, 467 copies of Making it Happen, which is a lso the distance in kilometres between Engelberg and Sochi. Dominique’s journey to this point has been a long one that of ten brought her to her knees. But get ting back up, time af ter time, has a lways been her for te.

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