The Province

PEACE POWER

Josh Dueck is one of 10 people, two teams inducted into B.C. Sports Hall of Fame

- GORDON MCINTYRE gordmcinty­re@postmedia.com twitter.com/gordmcinty­re

The Province is featuring five athletes, one builder and one media member being inducted to the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame on May 31 at a reception at Parq Vancouver.

They join sports medicine’s Alex McKechnie, who revolution­ized physiother­apy and has worked with the biggest names in sports; swimming’s Tom Johnson, who among other accomplish­ments was on 10 Olympics coaching staffs for Canada; the 1900-18 Rossland ladies ice hockey team, which was undefeated in organized play for 17 years; the 1991 national men’s rugby team, which reached the World Cup quarter-finals and included 23 players either born in B.C. or who played rugby in the province, as well as B.C.-born coach Ian Birtwell; and W.A.C. Bennett Award winner Alex Nelson, founding member and three-time president of the North American Indigenous Games Council, women’s rights crusader, and soccer coach for 42 years. Today’s feature is on Josh Dueck.

Life ever get you down? You need look no further than to Josh Dueck for inspiratio­n.

He’ll tell you, breaking your back sucks. It’s what you do from there that defines you.

“The way I see it, there’s this massive vortex of energy that comes with acute transition and it can be directed in one of two ways,” the Paralympic gold and silver medallist said over the phone from his home in Vernon.

“You can get stuck in it or you can use it in a way that drives you forward.”

Today, the 37-year-old Dueck is a motivation­al speaker, paralyzed from the waist down.

But back in 2004 Dueck was coaching kids’ skiing and decided to show off a bit.

He went up the hill, came down faster than he’d expected, and had a split second in which, as he put it, his ego and intuition battled, intuition telling him to bail.

Ego won and he went ahead with his jump and front-flip.

“I didn’t want to look bad in front of the kids I was coaching,” he said.

Dueck, 23 at the time, overshot the landing hill, fell 100 vertical feet — like falling from the roof of a 10-storey building — and landed on his face. The fall broke his back, leaving him a T-11 paraplegic.

After he’d been airlifted to Vancouver, this girl he knew, Lacey — she was 18 — quit her job to be at his side in the hospital. Today, Lacey is Dueck’s wife.

“She literally stopped everything she was doing, bought a bus ticket with the last little bit of cash she had in her pocket and came to the hospital to see a friend,” Dueck said.

“We talked about that recently and she said she just knew in her heart she had to come see me ... 14 years later, two beautiful kids and a bunch of great stories. Lacey has selflessly given so much.”

The couple’s daughter Nova is four-and-a-half years old, their son Hudson is one-and-a-half.

It took Dueck only nine months to be back on the slopes, in a sitski. It was 2005 and he made it his goal to represent Canada at the 2010 Vancouver Paralympic­s, where he would win silver in men’s slalom, sitting.

But after the Vancouver Paralympic­s, things didn’t go well.

“Suddenly, after 2010, I was devoid of goals,” he said.

He began drinking heavily, nearly pushing his wife out of his life.

“There was confusion and uncertaint­y,” Dueck said. “It blindsided me. I just did not see that void coming.

“It hit and it hit hard.”

So he set a new goal: To perform the first backflip on a sit-ski, which he nailed in the deep backcountr­y snow of Powder Mountain in 2012.

That got him 15 minutes on the Ellen DeGeneres Show and led to Sochi, where he added Olympic gold in men’s super combined, sitting, and silver in men’s downhill, sitting, to his collection of medals from winning the 2009 world downhill sit-ski championsh­ip at Pyeongchan­g, 2011 X Games at Aspen and multiple Canadian championsh­ips.

Dueck at least knew to expect what he calls the ‘Paralympic hangover’ after the 2014 Games.

“This time I knew it would be a challenge to not have sport as the principal focus in my life,” Dueck said.

He was 33. Lacey and he sold most of their belongings and rented out their house, bought an Airstream travel trailer and lived as nomads for a year, “just booting around,” letting all that had happened in the decade since he’d broken his back sink in.

“That was a pretty cool thing to do, but it still didn’t necessaril­y bridge the gap,” between being a competitiv­e skier and being retired.

Following a year of nomadic lifestyle, there followed a year of therapy, for his body and his mind, and then a year of applying his new life skills, Dueck said, to the point he felt comfortabl­e and confident moving forward.

Today, he sounds at peace, being the best dad and husband he can be, the best member of the community he can be.

“Life is not without its challenges,” the Kimberley native said. “I’m living in a great community, have a great little home and family, but I suspect that sense of peace comes from my drive to be the coach and mentor that I once was before my injury, helping and supporting those going through transition.”

Such as spinal-cord and other life-altering injuries, as well as athletes transition­ing out of full-time sport.

He and Lacey are working with UBC-Okanagan on a business plan for healing centres, leading to brickand-mortar centres where people can come and go. It’s the first time he and Lacey, once a competitiv­e volleyball player, have worked together on a project.

“The basis of what we’re doing is empowermen­t through adventure, healing through community. That’s the model we’re developing.”

 ?? — BRIANNE BOULTER ?? From left, Vernon’s Paralympic gold medallist Josh Dueck, son Hudson, daughter Nova, wife Lacey. Josh’s focus is on ‘healing through community.’
— BRIANNE BOULTER From left, Vernon’s Paralympic gold medallist Josh Dueck, son Hudson, daughter Nova, wife Lacey. Josh’s focus is on ‘healing through community.’
 ?? — TREVOR CLARK ?? Winter Paralympia­n Josh Dueck enjoys the waves, too, competing in the Duke Ocean Fest in Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii.
— TREVOR CLARK Winter Paralympia­n Josh Dueck enjoys the waves, too, competing in the Duke Ocean Fest in Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii.
 ?? — BRIANNE BOULTER ?? Family is at the centre of Josh Dueck’s life which he shares with Lacey and their children Hudson and Nova, right.
— BRIANNE BOULTER Family is at the centre of Josh Dueck’s life which he shares with Lacey and their children Hudson and Nova, right.

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