It has been an amazing and interesting time here. There have been periods of seeing how people deal with very little to do... and and they may have travelled up from Vancouver for the day- that means a minimum of 5 hours on a bus. There are way too many people for most of the jobs here. However working at a sports venue definitely has way more testing now. In the final race we usually test the top 5 and 3 random so that provides some interest for most volunteers - also hearing the crowds, meeting the athletes and dealing with them when their emotions are running pretty powerfully.
Different stations run pretty differently depending upon who is the station manager - another DCO (one of us) but so many personalities. My main commitment is at the sliding centre (luge, skeleton and bobsled) and we have a superb manager - he is so committed and positive and believes in working together. I spent a day at Alpine and it was great to see the ladies downhill (from the tv in the doping station) but the personalities there are so controlling and manage rather autocratically - so the tension runs high and the people do not have fun. People are settling into their roles and learning to cope with the position that they have been given. Most are very positive but there are the controlling people...and they too eventually get tired.
I worked in Athletes' Village tonight and most people were sent home early because there is virtually no testing left to do here. So I listened to an entertainer on their stage, then joined the drumming circle and in the evening I listened to a celloist/pianist for an hour. Also lunch, dinner and a little socializing. So I totally enjoyed myself. Some went home early and some went to the Medal Ceremony and I volunteered to stay at the village. ... Before working I enjoyed my near daily yoga class.
Yesterday was the most exciting day of working the sliding centre. We tested the female skeleton sliders for the second night. So tonight it was the top 5 and 3 random. Everyone was expecting a gold or at least a placement from Mellissa Hollingsworth. It was devastating that she came in fifth. She cried a lot and all athletes must get to doping control within 60 minutes of finishing the race. Our station manager showed his human side and let her unaccredited parents into the station for a little while (this means a supplementary report for breaking rules) and then they had to leave. The Germans hugged her and each other and talked. Everyone gave Melissa some time and space. The medallist that I processed said that they are all good friends and everyone believed that Melissa should have got a medal. She was proud of her attainment but felt for Melissa. She showed me a scrape on her arm and said that cost her the next medal up......Five athletes were less than 1 second apart after totalling the time for 4 runs. How can they believe that one is better than another. They all seem so dedicated and damned good to me.They have all worked and dreamed about this moment.
Then we gals went up to the mixed zone - at the finish line where the reporters are waiting in a line to talk to the athletes as they come off the track and after being notified for doping control. We got to watch the men - I got up on the dock (special sleeve colors are required for this privilege) just as Jon Montgomery came in first and won the gold for Canada in the skeleton. CTV got the first interview and then they talk to a line of reporters. Then the athletes are placed in a van with the chaperone (and me today) and with a police escort are driven the 300m to the media tent. This is a massive tent with probably 100 chairs and about 20 reporters asking questions - the backdrop that you always see on tv. It was fun to watch Jon answer questions and speak especially when someone asked him what he thought in the time before he knew that he had won. He replied that in the 52.so many seconds that he had not thought about it. A stupid question - as when he crossed the finish line he was the winner. It was wonderful to see his exuberance and again in the station how they are such good friends with one another - from competing against each other on tracks around the world.
Then the athletes and their chaperones and representatives walk the 30 m. to the doping control station. I left after they checked in here as the station gets too full with all of the people and extras are not wanted. Besides it was the end of a great shift. Then we caught the gondola down to Whistler and I jumped onto the bus for my hotel.
I am really getting into these Olympics. I seem to have a bit of a routine and I have enjoyed a yoga class most mornings - so nice to jump on a bus and arrive in 10 minutes. I have enjoyed several days of sunshine and fresh air and I am enjoying the hype and the buzz around Whistler as well as lots of groups playing and people milling and excited and positive. I was not so sure earlier on that it would play out this way as the doping was so slow and not very demanding and lots of people moaning. But as the Olympics started there was a change and for most some acceptance of the pace and looking to enjoy the opportunity just to be here. ...and as I suspected in the beginning I have done my fair share of testing....however not Lindsay Vonn as a VANOC employee did that. I have to wonder why. And the only athlete that has ever had her coat hung up for her. Don't silver, bronze and participation have the same value in some people's minds? They are all Olympians in my mind.