Lessons from Vancouver 2010: Go world!

February 28, 2010

The Vancouver Winter Olympic games have come to a close and the flame has been extinguished until the next Games…

The world stopped to watch, to listen, to feel and to share…

Some amazing things happened over the past 17 days… 

The initial tragedy of  Nodar Kumaritashvili,  Jennifer Heil’s silver medal (Canada’s first medal),  Alexandre Bilodeau’s gold medal (Canada’s first gold medal),  Petra Majdic’s triumph (skiing to bronze with broken ribs and a punctured lung), Melissa Hollingsworth (her tears), Jon Montgomery (enough said!), Shaun White’s amazing performance, Hannah Teter’s generosity, Sven Kramer’s lost gold, the courage and grief of  Joannie Rochette,  Team Canada’s men and women hockey teams’ gold winning performances… and the list goes on.

Over the next few weeks, I will reflect on some of the more powerful messages and meanings from these Olympic stories.  Millions of people experienced these events almost first hand (can you say mirror neuron?), they will have (of course) a mediatherapeutic spin to them…  The gold medal men’s hockey game was the most watched event in Canadian history.  We all shared the moment!

From this Canadian’s perspective, these Games were much more than sports and medal counts… I believe it has awoken an entire nation… nationalism and patriotism at this very moment have never been higher… and I’ll postulate, if we take these lessons and apply them… we may finally rise to celebrate globalism…

Go world!! 

Dr.P

BTW  We will explore paradoxical thinking and consider what would have happened if Canada won silver instead…

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