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Musings

Girl on Fire

Megan Harrod

Here's a fun little throwback. This winter I had the pleasure of having a savvy little sidekick by the name of Lexi Black join me on the Super Combined day at Vail/Beaver Creek World Championships to shadow me and share my story in a feature called, "Girl on Fire: A Day in the Life of U.S. Press Officer Megan Harrod". Lexi did an incredible job writing the piece, and in the  process I had so much fun hanging with her. Someday, this girl will rule the world. Well done, Lexi. You're a rockstar. And you can join me on the mountain any ol' day! Just for ol' time's sake, here's the piece...


Pop culture has had its fair share of “girls on fire” in recent years, including the self-proclaimed “on fire” singer Alicia Keys and the blazing heroine of the Hunger Games series, Katniss Everdeen.

But anyone who finds these figures deserving of that title hasn’t met Megan Harrod. She is the embodiment of a red-hot spark — lively, bright, feisty, and never, under any circumstances, stagnant.

Not that her position as the U.S. Ski Team Alpine Press Officer allows much stationary time; the media never quits, and by extension, neither does a press officer. Generally speaking, her long work days consist of supervising interviews, shuffling athletes back and forth from the finish to press pens, keeping tabs on televised appearances, and otherwise conducting the near impossible feat of keeping up with both athletes and their public representation.

It’s a job meant for someone energetic, intelligent, sociable, media-savvy, and passionate for the sport — all of which inherent traits of Megan, who officially joined the U.S. Ski Team last October. I was lucky enough to catch up with her at the 2015 World Championships in Vail, and spent the day of the men’s super combined keeping up with the high pace of the fireball herself.

My day with Megan began at 8 a.m. in the official housing facility of the U.S. Ski Team, the Osprey Hotel (they really can’t get enough of their predatory birds here). As I tentatively wandered through the front door, I spotted the already busy Megan lugging around a boot bag, a pair of skis and poles, and such a monstrous equipment bag that it could probably encompass a small country (Vatican City, maybe?).

After organizing the heap of bags, we had some time to sit and chat, mostly about Travis Ganong’s silver the previous day, while Megan returned to her half-finished breakfast. She had accompanied Ganong from the finish to multiple interviews, a press conference, a Universal Sports appearance, the awards ceremony, a party at the Audi VIP Lounge in Vail, and a brief debut at a trustee dinner. Finally, she told me, around 8:30 p.m., the relentless succession of a podium athlete’s appearances were over — yet somehow there was still enough energy for them to burn up the dance floor in celebration a couple of hours later at Beaver Creek’s bar of choice, the Coyote Cafe.

As fun as it all sounded, I had to imagine that such long days would become vaguely nightmarish after awhile, but Harrod talked about it so excitedly that some part of me wondered if the girl was even capable of complaining or getting tired — or if she was human at all?

The shuttle that would take us to the Red Tail Stadium rolled up soon after, and we rushed to compose both ourselves and our staggering amount of equipment. Megan donned her good-luck Wonder Woman socks, pulling them up over her star-spangled, red-white-and-blue leggings before piling onto the little green bus. As we rode up to the hill, all I could do was listen and laugh to myself as Megan bantered with the bus riders — coaches, physios, and Beaver Creek volunteers. She joked about her wannabe boyfriend, Christof Innerhoffer, the stellar dance moves displayed the night before by U.S. men’s head coach Sasha Rearick, her infamous lifelike latex unicorn mask, and how she managed to photobomb Dennis Quaid’s selfie at the Audi Lounge.

Megan had warmed up the air around our cluster of international ski officials so much that by the time we climbed into the bed of a snow-treaded pickup truck to take us the remainder of the way, everyone had joined in on the chitchat — including an Italian coach doing his rendition of Ben Stiller in “Starsky and Hutch.”

After ditching a portion of the gear at the finish area, we headed up the chairlift for inspection. From the top of the chair, the last segment of our transportation saga was hitching a ride behind a snowmobile to the starthouse. There were no drivers to be seen when we arrived at the snowmobiles, and for a brief instant, Megan displayed another side of herself which I hadn’t seen yet — a fierce authoritativeness that sparked in her voice as she called down to volunteers to ask where the drivers were. The demand was met seconds later as a driver trotted up to us, and Megan returned instantly to her lighthearted self, moping that I had gotten the faster snowmobile.

I’d never inspected a World Cup downhill, so by the time we were slipping the Birds Of Prey, I was practically shaking with a mix of disbelief, exhilaration, and the vague fear that I’d tip over on the Brink and slide to the very bottom of the pitch (actually quite possible).

We clicked into our skis and I tentatively made my way down, attempting to keep up with Megan, who indifferently flew down the hill and paused only to cast a few “thank you’s” over her shoulder to the volunteer course workers lining the hill. We’d come to a stop every now and then, Megan would nonchalantly introduce me to several coaches, and we’d take off again while I internally screamed with excitement.

Nothing, however, was quite as incredible as coming over the top of the Red Tail jump. Megan laid down a couple casual arcs, and I followed in her wake, for the first time understanding to some level what it must feel like to go through the finish line before Red Tail Stadium’s massive crowds.

After inspection, we returned to the press room, where Megan wrote her “World Cup Notes” to email out to the members of the media. It was a calm before the storm as she was soon out of her seat to take her place in the athlete area outside the finish corral. I assumed my own position in a press pen on the opposite side of the corral, where I watched the race alongside flocks of journalists.

megan_lexi1.jpg

Photo: Lexi Black

Megan would appear every now and then, athlete in tow, dialed back slightly from her usual eccentricity and demonstrating glimpses of the authority I’d witnessed earlier as journalists squished together to record the athlete’s post-racing quotes. There was no question that when Megan was on the job, she had her priorities set.

After the race, it didn’t seem like much time had passed before Megan fetched me from the pressroom for the slalom inspection. We caught up with a couple of U.S. Ski Team coaches and stood with them as athletes slid by, poking fun at the out-of-place behemoth downhillers about to attempt the slalom and the spring-chicken D-Team athletes ready to forerun. After we’d had our fun, we left the coaches to their raillery and skied over to Red Tail. The stands had become an incredible rippling sea of multicolored figures and flags. The vista was too tempting; the two of us shamelessly posed for a selfie, the finish banner and colossal crowd of fans as our backdrop (#sorrynotsorry).

  

 

 

From there, Megan’s day picked up pace exponentially — Ligety received a somewhat unexpected bronze, which lined her schedule with post-podium affairs long after I’d leave the hill. I was decently tired from following her around for less than half of her work day (granted, I had binge-watched Netflix until ungodly hours of the morning the night before) and I couldn’t imagine how she’d now be continuing on to even more events.

What was even more astounding is how Megan could do this, day after day, weeks at a time, and never have that flame of hers put out. There’s one simple conclusion I could work out: she really has a passion for this industry. She’s wholeheartedly committed to this unremitting world she lives in, endlessly supporting the athletes, working hard at the tasks set before her, and befriending people from all walks of skiing life along the way.

Look out for the signs — officials laughing more than usual, athletes cracking grins even after bad runs, smoother-than-usual press and athlete relations, or a unicorn on skis — because where there’s smoke, there’s Megan.

Lexi Black, Guest Contributor
Lexi Black grew up racing in Sun Valley, Idaho, and is currently attending Holderness School in New Hampshire. She's a nature enthusiast and avid adventurer.


Isn't Lexi just an unreal writer?! Ahhh, this throwback makes me yearn for snow and for the adrenaline rush and chaos of ski season. I can't wait! I love my job!

This is a cool story...

Megan Harrod

A few weekends ago I went on a little weekend sojourn to Oregon and after surfing Cannon Beach this rad chick and her family walked by and said "hi." I was captivated by her beauty and amazed by her energy, even though she had lots of little ones with her. Cool moms always catch my eye...mostly because I'm amazed by their superhero-like qualities and I can't imagine having that much zest while still being responsible for a bunch of small, screaming humans. She complimented me on my hair and I told her the catalyst was a recent trip to India. She then went to her car and grabbed something, and came back, asking me if she could interview me for her wellness blog. I kind of giggled, considering I haven't been the most diligent lately with fitness, but I obliged, and it was fun. I was reminded how much I love talking about goals and mindfulness.

I stored this interaction in the back of my head until yesterday when Bonnie sent me the link to this blog post. Bonnie's journey is a beautiful reminder that good things can come out of a conversation with a stranger, and that everyone has a story to tell...

Read on: http://carrotbowl.com/dynamo-megan-harrod/

You may say I'm a dreamer...

Megan Harrod

...but I'm not the only one. I dream at night...and during the day. I dream about wandering through radiant sparkle countries like Narnia, breathing in the cool, crisp mountain air, living in a van by the ocean in a faraway land, surfing 15 footers (I'd be terrified, let's be honest...but I still dream about it), starting my own sustainable fashion business, owning a coffee shop/boutique called "El Mundo" featuring treats and trinkets from around the world, making others laugh and feel good about themselves, finding that one unique travel companion that can adventure through life with fearlessly exploring with me (and that I don't get sick of), jumping on big, fluffy clouds high, high up in the sky, traveling to every nook and cranny of this big, beautiful globe...yeah, I dream A LOT. I love life. I love fun. I remember when I was a small child I'd get disgruntled when I'd find myself in situations where I wasn't having fun and my father would say, "Life isn't about having fun, Megan!" I disagree, pops. On top of that, I've always been a dreamer. And a firm believer in the impossible. You know, it's like that quote in Alice in Wonderland, 'Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.' Let's make it seven. Call me an over-achiever-dreamer. It's true. I LOVE to dream.

I transitioned through life living with a father who would tell me my head was stuck up in the clouds to living with a man who would tell me my head was stuck up in the clouds. Funny enough, that was the original reason that man fell so deeply in love with me in the first place. The way I saw it is that I'd rather have a head stuck up in the clouds exploring that big ol' beautiful universe than a head stuck elsewhere. Dreaming is FUN. But what I've realized is that most people don't do it because they're fearful of the outcome...

"The Evolution of a Dream"

Dream is implanted into brain.

Dreamer becomes thrilled.

Dreamer becomes terrified.

If no action is taken, terrifying thoughts grow into flesh-eating monsters. Dream is considered unrealistic.

If action is taken, Megan, terrifying thoughts are revealed to be paper tigers. Confidence soars, miracles unfold, and dreamer begins to saunter.

Either way, nothing remains the same.

Gr-r,
    The Universe

P.S. The difference taking action will make in your life, Megan, is more than can be comprehended. But, of course, this is also true of inaction.

I'm more fearful of inaction than I am of dreaming. So this is a little Friday nudge in the bum to get out there and fearlessly dream. Dream big. Dream audaciously. Be a Dream Warrior. And then what?! Share your dreams with the people in your life who matter most...you know, the ones who will support your big dreams. After that, all that's left is to SOAR.

P.S. My father has come around; I don't want to speak for him, but I think he has seen me live a successful, fearless, courageous life of FUN as a big dreamer. And as for that man...well, we're no longer together. It's for the best for both of us. I'll keep dreaming big and bold dreams, and he'll keep doing the amazing things he's doing in his life.

(Non-) Culture Shock

Megan Harrod

Reverse culture shock. Ever had it? I have. Hit me hard when I returned from Prague, after living and traveling there for nearly two years. I came home and I was like a fish out of water. Why? First off, I missed my expat family immensely. I had established roots in Prague that most expats who had lived there for years had not established - both with locals and expats. I didn't understand 75% of what was going on around me because I didn't speak Czech, so I had grown accustomed to tuning everything out. Even - and especially - American media and current events. I absolutely loved my job. The hosteling industry is a special one, built around creating a community and exploring a new destination. It felt right for me. I had the freedom to travel near and far - from weekend sojourns by myself to Spanish getaways in Valencia with gal friends. The friends I had in Prague were more like family...they would have dropped anything, even in the wee hours of the morning, to help a friend in need. When I returned home I was thrust into a whole different world: I could hear everything so keenly. I had never thought that I'd experience that feeling, but it was true - I unwillingly listened to strangers' conversations because my ears weren't used to hearing my native language so much. I remember visiting Times Square in New York months after I had returned and still feeling my chest tighten and my anxiety grow. Welcome home to 'MURICA...where everything is bigger, brighter, and louder. News broadcasters were aesthetically jarring to me, and wore way too much make-up. I yearned for my weekend travels to foreign countries. But, as I've learned throughout my travels, the people make a place and I missed the people so deeply. The value of friendship wasn't the same in the U.S. either. What I realized most was that I had changed to the core, and everything and everyone around me was the same as I had left it/them two years prior.

This time it feels different. Sure, I learned lessons on the road as a solo female traveler. I learned that the way we do things in the west isn't always the best way. I learned that the value of human life is different depending on your geographical location. I learned that sometimes, when you least expect it, shit happens. In your pants, even. And it can be really, really uncomfortable. I learned that ego is something we, as humans, will always struggle to keep in check. I learned that sometimes it's better to have a travel companion, and sometimes it's better to travel alone. I learned that we - in the U.S. - are generally clueless about life in faraway lands, unless we have traveled those lands ourselves. I learned that every traveler has a different experience with a place depending on what kind of heart and mind they bring to that place. I learned that if you can travel in India as a single solo traveler, you can travel anywhere in the world. I learned a lot. But the biggest lesson I learned was the value of a place called "home," thousands of miles away in Utah. I was actually looking forward to heading back. I had never felt that before. This was a foreign feeling, after what I experienced in returning from adventures like Prague. You see, when I returned from Prague - though it was my choice - I wasn't ready to come back. I felt as though Prague had broken up with me, but I wasn't ready to say "goodbye." With India, I was ready to go back to my Utah basecamp.

But culture shock?! Nope...I didn't feel culture shock when I returned. Sure, it was different here in Park City...but I had come home to the 4th of July and a place that was a white, upper middle class, cushy, comfortable, yoga class-attending "culture." I jumped on the wide-open highway with no cows to maneuver around, no honking filling my ears, and no trash littered along the road. Surrounded by mountains. It was peaceful. Calm. Easy. Yeah, life is so easy here. A complete 180 from India. But what I was experiencing was not culture shock, rather it was non-culture shock. Sure, there's a mountain culture here, but really - there's no real, raw, authentic culture. Come on, this is 'Murica, an amalgam of cultures without any distinct identity.

Culture is the sounds of bells ringing in the streets as men carry the body of a deceased family member - wrapped in silver and gold and finished off with marigolds - to their cremation ceremony on the Mother Ganga. Culture is an 11th generation block printer taking pride in his work and continuing to create the same art his family has created for decades. Culture is the family unit - mother, father, sisters, grandparents - living under one roof and eating breakfast, lunch and dinner together at the table, finishing it off with fresh mangoes for dessert, purchased from the market that day. Culture is custom. It's the sights, sounds and smells that make a place so unique. It's purchasing an offering of marigolds and waiting in line with women adorned in vibrant saris, to bring it to the Durga Mandir Temple and pray to the goddess Durga. Culture is the intermingling smells of saffron, mint, cardamom, sugar cane juice, cinnamon and human feces at the market. Culture is negotiating your way through life in a place that demands cerebral interactions at every juncture of your day - whether it be buying a bundle of lychees at the market or finding a tuk tuk to get you from point A to B. Culture is the Aarti ceremony on the Ganges at sunset in Rishikesh. I can go on, and on, and on. In India, the culture is rich. In Park City, not so much. Don't get me wrong, I love it here. It's just different.

While away, I disconnected from western current events, completely missing anything and everything associated with the 2016 presidential election. Which was, well, quite lovely actually. I didn't know anything about the fact that Donald Trump was running for president and spewing racial slurs about the Latino population (what a douchebag, by the way). But what was most surprising was the shower of rainbows that came on social media one day while I was sitting in Varanasi - the holiest city in India. The U.S. Supreme Court made same-sex marriage legal nationwide?! Where was I? I was floored. Never did I think it would happen that fast. Talk about culture shock...that night I went out with a German dude, Austrian gal and Canadian couple from Québec to celebrate gay marriage. Hilarious.

To answer your question...nope, no culture shock. Non-culture shock, yes. Definitely. But either way, it's good to be back. And yes - I did love India and will venture there again someday...