BC Business Magazine

WEEKEND WARRIOR

Sanctuary AI co-founder Geordie Rose is a decorated wrestler. He still hits the mat, but in a less competitiv­e setting

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Sanctuary AI’S Geordie Rose used to win championsh­ips. Now he fights for fun

I started [wrestling] when I was 13, my first year in high school, and I was terrible, lost every single match, about 30 of them. I was going to quit and not show up for the next year, but a couple of friends were in the program and said, “Why don’t you come out for the first few weeks and see how it goes?” So I did, and that next year I didn’t lose any. I won every single match and won the Montreal city championsh­ips, and went on to come second at the age group national championsh­ips, so I really turned it around.

I did it for about 20 years; it was the most important thing in my life for most of high school and university.

I think there’s a shared feeling for a lot of us— people who are into boxing and different martial arts—that it can look a little glamorous from the outside, especially with the rise of things like MMA, but the reality is that you’re getting punched in the face every day. I would not trade the experience for anything, but I don’t think I ever really enjoyed it.

Brazilian jiu-jitsu is a lot more fun. You can tailor it to the pace and the age that you are, whereas in wrestling that’s not true. Wrestling is a little bit like F1 driving, there’s only one speed. But in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, there’s everything from people who have never done it before to those who are competing profession­ally, so you can scale your commitment.

Competing is a binary thing. You’re either doing it or you’re not, and the competitio­n training is very different than just having fun training. So I’m at the stage in my life where I’m just trying to have fun. I don’t have it in me anymore to compete at a high level. At some point it’s just “Who am I kidding?” I do think about it from time to time, but it’s one of those more wistful things, like, “Oh, if I was only 20 years younger.”

— as told to Nathan Caddell This interview has been edited

Pautsch grew up in Muskoka, Ontario, the youngest of seven children raised by a single mother. “She instilled a lot into us about being resourcefu­l, figuring things out yourself and being independen­t.”

Without having sailed before, Pautsch once found herself in an internatio­nal sailing regatta–featuring 15 countries over a twoweek race–in Italy. Two years later, she was invited back as a coach. “I just say yes to random things that feel right, and they lead to the most extraordin­ary adventures.”

Pautsch loves travel, and after a trip to Kenya in 2007, she became vice-chair of KASOW (Kanyawegi Support for Orphans and Widows), a Canadian charity that encourages entreprene­urship and helps in areas such as health. It's the “real-life applicatio­n” of her formal studies, she explains.

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