Two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin finally feels "like myself again" after recovering from a ski racing crash last season and lingering post-traumatic stress disorder.
Shiffrin says in essay she feels ‘like myself again’ after recovering from ski racing crash, PTSD
Two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin finally feels "like myself again" after recovering from a ski racing crash last season and lingering post-traumatic stress disorder.
Shiffrin described in an essay for The Players' Tribune released Friday the physical and mental hurdles she needed to clear after her serious spill during a giant slalom race in Killington, Vermont, on Nov. 30. In the crash, something punctured Shiffrin's side and caused severe damage to her oblique muscles.
"Everyone knows what it feels like to have a bad cough. But PTSD ... it's not like that," the 30-year-old from Edwards, Colorado, wrote. "It comes in all shapes and sizes. Everyone experiences it in their own way, and no two cases are exactly alike."
Shiffrin was leading after the first run of the GS that day in Killington. With the finish line in sight on her final run, she lost an edge and slid into a gate, flipping over her skis. The all-time winningest Alpine World Cup ski racer then slammed into another gate before coming to a stop in the protective fencing. To this day, she doesn't know what led to the puncture wound, only that it was “a millimeter from pretty catastrophic," she told The Associated Press.