Life Lessons from Shirley

by Feb 17, 200911 comments

halfpipePart of my volunteer responsibilities as a Copper Mountain Ambassador is to take visitors who are unfamiliar with the area on a mountain tour. This week I took Shirley Ziebarth touring. She made it clear to me that she only wanted to ski advanced terrain. No beginner or intermediate stuff for her! As we began, I quickly realized I would need to kick it up a notch if I wanted to keep up with her. We zoomed around the mountain covering steep pitches, bumps, and much of the advanced terrain on the mountain. Realizing that she was an adventurous type, I asked her if she would like to ski in the terrain park. This is where all the young dudes hang out and do their “180”s, “360”s and “helicopters” careening off impossibly high ramps created by snow cats. Copper Mountain has a half pipe that is one of the highest in North America – 22 feet! So we zoomed down the sides of both terrain parks and Shirley liked it so much she egged me on to do them both again – and this is at 11,000 feet where most New Englanders are puffing to catch their breath!

shirley-s-l-ziebarth-2At the top of one of the ramps, I turned to the young aerialist beside me and asked him “How old are you, pal?” and he replied, “Twenty-one.” I said, “This lady, who is about to speed down the ramp, is FOUR TIMES your age – she is 81!” His jaw dropped in awe – as it should have.

Shirley told me, “This is not my best sport – I’m much better at waterskiing!”

Shirley is inspired and inspiring – I had one of the best ski days in ages. Her attitude is fun, she has an acutely active mind and a great sense of humor, she is interested in politics, corporate life, people, wellness, being happy and athletics. She is living large, keeping in shape and remaining current. These are the lessons we learn from people – our elders and teachers – more than from data or from tired texts. These are the lessons we must learn in order to be effective and inspiring leaders and humans – and in order to live inspiring and effective lives.

Shirley, You go girl! And thanks for the lesson!