Unforgiving Audiobook By Lindsey Jacobellis cover art

Unforgiving

Lessons from the Fall

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Unforgiving

By: Lindsey Jacobellis
Narrated by: Abby Craden
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About this listen

In this deeply personal memoir in the vein of Andre Agassi's Open and Megan Rapinoe’s One Life, the winningest snowboardcross rider of all time chronicles her career, a story of self-growth that reveals the secret of her resilience and how she overcame crushing early failure to win Olympic gold.

On February 16, 2006, twenty-year old American snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis was poised to win the first gold medal in women’s snowboardcross, a sport making its Olympic debut. With a seemingly insurmountable lead over the other competitors, Lindsey only needed a clean run for the gold medal to be hers. But as the five-time world champion entered the last 100 meters the unthinkable happened: choosing to add a little flair to the run, she grabbed the back edge of her board—then lost her balance and fell. It was a mistake that would go down as one of the biggest “unforced errors” in all of sports history.

For the next sixteen years, Jacobellis endured the criticism and second-guessing of Olympic commentators, sportswriters, and detractors. Day after day she persevered and trained harder on the snow and with her life coach, learning the power of resilience and what the sport really meant to her. The fierce competitor discovered that life, though it may not seem like it, does happen in just the right way: you end up precisely where you were meant to be. At the 2022 Beijing Winter Games, Lindsey twice reached the top of the podium, becoming a two-time Olympic gold medalist.

Unforgiving recounts Lindsey’s journey from disappointment to triumph. It is an honest account of one life-altering misstep and its aftermath, and a reflection on what it means to come of age as an athlete in the spotlight, the weight of expectations, falling short, and ultimately fulfilling your dreams. Unforgiving is about the purpose-driven, forward-looking attitude Lindsey took on after her fall, when looking back wouldn’t have done anyone any favors. It’s about the pass she refused to grant herself until she’d earned it. Unforgiving is about the commitment to seek her own truth—and to speak up on one’s own behalf after letting others do it for years.

Forgiveness, in the end, is at the heart of Lindsey’s story, but underneath and alongside is its polar opposite—an unending, uncompromising determination to push herself, to prove herself, to power past every obstacle in her path, even those of her own making.

©2023 Lindsey Jacobellis (P)2023 HarperCollins Publishers
Olympics & Paralympics Sports Winter Sports Women Inspiring Resilience
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Great Listen!

Great inner story telling with flair, revealing insights and insiders view of a very public career.

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Such an inspiration

Lindsey and her story are an incredible inspiration and I loved walking through the details with her in this well written book!

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Perfection

Loved hearing her story of continued determination and fight. The performance was lacking but the story was worth it.

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A Tale of Fortitude

Lindsey Jacobellis has played a tremendous role in developing the sport of SBX. In the book she does a great job of sharing her journey with the reader. As strongly as she emphasizes that she has come to terms with the method that resulted in her winning silver instead of gold in Torino, it really seems like she has not. She stresses how she did not plan it or make a decision to do it, but rather that it was an organic expression of joy without thought. Then a few sentences later she says how the decision to do that method changed her life. I remember it on TV. When she did it, of course it was seen a showboating and of course the natural reaction was "that's what you get." But it was only one moment in time and she's been both haunted and tortured about it since then. While this is not dissimilar to someone who commits a spur of the moment crime in a split second that dictates the rest of the person's life, Jacobellis didn't' hurt anyone but herself. I could not help but wonder what it would feel like if people around the world saw and forever judged me by my actions in my dumbest moment. No one would want that. In the end it did not affect the tremendous athlete that she would continue to be, leading to two Olympic gold medals 16 year later. An enjoyable read with good insight into an interesting life.
As for narration, this was not the right narrator for this book. Too strait laced for this type of writing.

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