
The day after her fall in the women’s downhill at the Winter Olympic Games in Milan-Cortina, Lindsey Vonn posted a message on Instagram. Not just a medical update, but a reflection:
“I dreamt, I tried, I jumped.”
No polish. Just truth.
“Life is too short not to take chances on yourself. Because the only failure in life is not trying. I believe in you, just as you believe in me.”
Those words carried more weight than any press conference could have.
In skiing and life, falls are inevitable. What matters is what she chose to emphasize, something larger: the moral necessity of trying.
Excellence is rarely a straight line. It is carved, like a downhill run, through risk and uncertainty. The athlete who waits for perfect conditions never leaves the gate. The citizen who waits for perfect certainty never takes a stand. The writer who waits for perfect clarity never writes the first sentence.
Vonn’s message was perspective: the understanding that a fall is an event, not a verdict. And from that understanding comes something steadier. The quiet decision to rise.
That’s persistence.
Faith in the effort itself. The discipline to stand again, the refusal to grant one painful moment the authority to define an entire life.
Our culture often treats failure as final. One mistake, one fall, and judgment is swift. But real excellence demands something more. It demands resilience. It demands the courage and the persistence to attempt what might not succeed.
“The only failure in life is not trying.”
That’s not a slogan. It’s an ethic.
It’s a responsibility to oneself. Whatever gifts we possess are not meant to remain untouched, protected from risk. They are meant to be tested.
And that may be the quiet lesson here: excellence is not measured only by medals. It is measured by the willingness to take another step, even after the last one ended in a fall.
Dream. Try. Jump.
And if you fall, rise with dignity and go again.
That… is Lindsey Vonn’s gold medal moment.










