쉐도잉 연습: Gu Ailing apologizes for being late to press conference after learning grandmother passed|Olympics - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C1
Yeah, I'm so proud of how I've done this Olympics.
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Yeah, I'm so proud of how I've done this Olympics.
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I joke, I'm not a betting woman,
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but if I were, I took a big gamble this time
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because I chose to do three events knowing that I hadn't trained halfpipe in two months,
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knowing that I would miss the halfpipe training because in case I made big air finals,
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which I also hadn't competed in in four years, mind you.
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And so being able to really trust myself that when it came down to the moment,
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I would be able to perform to the best of my ability regardless of metal color or metal in general.
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But that's a big bet.
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And also just the difficulty of competing in three events,
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making finals in three events,
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I had to compete six times.
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And I kind of liken it to a marathon but the pace of a hundred meter dash.
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Because every day is the Olympics.
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I have to give 100% every day.
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So there's no day that I can just chill a little because every day matters.
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So I guess what I mean to say with
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that is I have done something that I took a big risk in trusting myself and I'm glad that I did.
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I walk away as the most decorated free skier of all time, male or female.
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I have the most gold medals of any free skier ever, male or female.
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And that is something that I'm so, so proud of.
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It's unbelievable to me.
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It's still surreal.
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And so I appreciate all the people who support me and who hopefully take up free skiing maybe because of me,
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or at least maybe heard about free skiing for the first time,
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that those are the people who I do it for.
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Otherwise, I just encourage people to use that energy
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and direct it to something that makes the world better in their own way.
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I think I'm making the most amount of good with the powers that I have as a 22-year-old athlete,
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and I think in this way I'm benefiting the most people.
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If people disagree with me,
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if they have other skill sets,
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which I'm sure they do,
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then I encourage them to direct it elsewhere and to make the world better in their own way.
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As young women, I think it is easy to doubt.
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And I mean this as in like instilled,
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you know, self instilled self doubt,
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but also maybe external subtleties and like little micro things
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that make you doubt yourself and over time make you afraid to try.
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That's why we see rates of young women participating in sports drop off precipitously between the ages of 11 and 14.
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And so as far as trusting yourself,
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the power of sport is unparalleled because it is evidence over affirmation.
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It's, you don't tell yourself,
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oh, I can handle the pressure, oh, I'm so great.
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You do it, time and again.
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And another thing, you know,
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I said this earlier in an interview,
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I said sports are really honest because you can't lie to yourself.
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You know when you stayed late and other people weren't there.
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You know when you showed up early and other people weren't there.
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You know when you gave 100% in training day in,
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day out for months, for months.
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And so it's not about,
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you know, at the last second I tell myself a chipper little line and call it a day.
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It's the fact that I look back on quite literally years,
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like decade of hard work,
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of pouring my heart and soul into this sport.
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And so it's, yeah, it's trusting myself,
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but it's building that trust every day.
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And so that's a big reason why I encourage more young girls to get into sports,
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because I think that the power it has to build and instill that confidence in people
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is a really special and unique form.
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Oh yeah, I guess I didn't answer the second question.
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So it's Fashion Week in Milan,
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so I have the other job, the other fashion thing.
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No, no, I'm really excited to just explore some other avenues,
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be creative, and explore my femininity through fashion,
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which is something I've always loved,
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and to kind of put that in juxtaposition with skiing and with sports,
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and I think that they can coexist so beautifully,
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And so I hope to represent that next week in Milan.
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A big thing is I'm not afraid to try.
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I take big risks and for the last two Olympics, it's worked out.
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But even if it hadn't,
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I think I left nothing on the table.
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Like I know that looking back at this Olympics and the months that preceded it,
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there's quite literally nothing that I could have done more.
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Like I did everything I could every single day,
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every single thing that I could.
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Like, if you can think of something,
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like, oh, I should do this now, I've done it.
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I have done every single thing I could possibly do for this Olympics.
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And so, it's like if things didn't go my way,
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I wouldn't regret feeling unprepared.
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I wouldn't regret feeling like I could have done more.
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And so that, I also think,
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instills a bit of confidence in you,
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because you can never control the result,
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you can never control the outcome,
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but you can control the preparation,
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and most importantly, you can fall in love with the process.
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I'm so proud of you.
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I'm very happy.
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I always say that I have a medal in the prize,
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a medal in the prize.
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It's very difficult.
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So, I have a medal in the prize.
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It's just six times, 100% of the prize.
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This is a challenge for me.
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I don't want to say that.
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I think I can't say that.
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I can only control my day every day.
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Then I liked it later in a bunch of the games where they probably come from the seventh championship.
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In this series we começa
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because of what I think there is a lot of camp
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From each other I think they are at by turning around to watch our game which I think is important.
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I make reviews for the world and also support the Chinese?
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Brad Manfeya first and again to share the content that works like the G pleas.
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The G漂亮!
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Thank you, Charlotte.
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That's very kind.
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Oh, man.
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Do I think?
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I think overall I'm just a pensive person.
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Like, I'm a very introspective I'm an introspective young woman like I spend a lot of time in my head
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And it's not a bad place to be I journal a lot.
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I break down all of my thought processes I think I apply a very analytical lens to my own thinking
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and I kind of modify it Because it's so interesting you can control what you think
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Like you can control how you think
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and therefore you can control who you are and especially as a young person like I'm 22 too.
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So with neuroplasticity on my side,
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I can literally become exactly who I want to be.
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How cool is that?
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Like how empowering is that?
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Right?
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And so the fact is I get to become every day the kind of person that me at age eight would revere.
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Like I would be obsessed with me today.
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Are you kidding?
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I would love me.
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And I think that's the biggest flex of all time
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that you can have like little younger you be proud of you today.
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And so I guess for me,
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it's like, yes, I spend a lot of time in my own head.
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Yes, I think a lot,
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but it's not really like in an egotistical kind of way.
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It's in like a tinkering,
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like a scientist kind of way.
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I'm always trying to modify.
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I'm trying to think how can I be better?
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How can I approach my own brain the way that I approach my craft of free skiing
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so that I can be better tomorrow than I was today?
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Yeah, I think for me,
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global beneficial impact is like my central theme.
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And there are a lot of different avenues that anybody can do that.
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And I think it's more assessing your individual skillset and trying to say,
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okay, what is the way that I can,
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as a person, do the most good in the world.
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So right now, I'm young,
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I'm energetic, my body is physically as capable as it can be compared to 30 years down the line.
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So it makes the most sense for me to do that through the avenues that I'm exploring now,
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fashion, sport, and skiing.
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Down the line, I think it will absolutely take a different form.
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Yeah, I think as I age and as I grow,
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and the avenue of highest optimization will change will change.
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I'm not going to be too specific in answering that because I don't want to commit myself to something,
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but do I have ideas?
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Yes, absolutely.
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So when I had this press conference four years ago,
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a lot of it was theoretical.
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I say, I want to inspire more girls to try skiing.
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I don't even need to do that anymore because now we can just look at the numbers.
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350 million people tried snow sports for the first time.
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There's double-digit increase growth in the industry,
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both in terms of snow sport impressions,
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in terms of sponsorships, money in the sport.
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This is huge because it's not just about,
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okay, it is about there's people in China,
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there are kids in China,
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there are girls in China whose lives are going to be touched by the beautiful and wonderful power of sport.
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So that in and of itself is absolutely measured impact that I think I had always wanted.
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I reached that goal and I exceeded it.
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The second thing is within the the ski industry,
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there are more eyes on this sport than there were four years ago.
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There are more people paying attention to it now.
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The fact is a rising tide raises all boats.
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And so this is also good for every other athlete competing,
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regardless of what country you compete for.
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And so that kind of mentality of,
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I want to bring the sport to more people,
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to hopefully benefit people outside the sport,
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and also be able to give back to my own community,
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free skiing, and everybody who partakes in it now.
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As a competitor, I don't want to generalize,
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but as a competitor myself,
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I think we yearn, the thing we yearn for most is a worthy opponent.
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I think there's something so beautiful in that.
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It's not about beating other people,
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but it's about this sense of healthy competition.
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That's what sportsmanship is.
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That's what the Olympics are about.
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If I went to a middle school and beat everybody at free skiing there,
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it's not exciting for anybody.
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What's exciting is that year after year,
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we get to see the progression of a sport as the average of everybody
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and everybody's average rises and we all get better.
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And maybe the people at the top are contributing a little bit more,
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but everybody is contributing to that growth.
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And that's something that's really special to me.
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So do I welcome that?
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Yeah, absolutely.
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I mean, I love to compete.
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I love to compete.
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I love to win, but I love to compete and I love to ski.
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And so if I were to put that in order,
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I would say I love to ski first and then I love to compete and then I love to win.
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But at my heart and soul, I like to ski.
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Yeah.
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And then I know you said that was the last question,
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but I just want to say something really quickly.
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The reason I was late is that I just found out that my grandma passed away.
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And she was like a really,
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she was a really big part of my life growing up.
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And someone I looked up to immensely.
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She was such a strong, she was a fighter.
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And I think what's so interesting is that a lot of people just cruise through life.
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But she was a steamship.
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Like this woman commanded life.
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And she grabbed it by the reins.
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And she made it into what she wanted it to be.
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and she inspired me so much.
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The last time I saw her,
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before I came to the Olympics,
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she was very sick, so I knew that this was a possibility.
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I didn't promise her that I was going to win,
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but I did promise her that I was going to be brave.
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She has been brave, and that's why I keep referring to this theme of betting on myself
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and being brave and taking risks.
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It actually goes back to that promise that I made my grandma,
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and so I'm really happy that I was able to uphold that and hopefully do her proud,
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but it's also a really difficult time for me now So I really apologize for being late,
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but that's what was going on.
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Sorry.
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Guo Zhengfeng.
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Yeah, that's my middle name, Feng, for her.
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Guo Eling, Sheshe for sharing your emotions with us.
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That's all what we have for today.
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Thanks for attending on-site or online.
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And these are the last words from Livinio Snowpark press conference room.
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Stop the live stream now.
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Thank you.

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주요 어휘 및 구문

  • trust myself - 스스로를 믿다
  • big gamble - 큰 위험을 감수하다
  • perform to the best of my ability - 최선을 다해 수행하다
  • make the world better - 세상을 더 좋게 만들다
  • self-doubt - 자기 의심
  • honest sport - 정직한 스포츠
  • evidence over affirmation - 확인보다 증거가 중요하다
  • young women participation - 젊은 여성의 참여

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