Olympic skier gets fresh start in Selkirk College Nursing Program

Passion fueled Grey’s successful career as a cross country ski-racer and is now fuelling his second career.

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Retired National Cross Country Ski Team member George Grey.

Retired National Cross Country Ski Team member George Grey studies in the Nursing Program at Selkirk College. — Photo courtesy Selkirk College

After traveling the world as a competitive skier, two-time Olympian George Grey has come home to study at Selkirk College launching a new chapter in his life.

Grey, a 36-year-old retired cross-country ski racer, is in his third year of the Selkirk College Nursing Program. Growing up in Rossland, naturally outdoor pursuits were always on his mind and his dream was to compete. The medical profession wasn’t even a twinkle in his eye.

“I started competitive skiing as a young kid,” Grey says. “It was nothing big, just a little race here in Rossland, and then I started to excel in cross country. Naturally, when you do well at something you start to like it more and more.”

At 16-years-old, Grey began competing at the national level developing lifelong skills of perseverance and dedication. He was on the Senior Canadian National Team for just over a decade, at the peak of his career training 35 hours a week headquartered out of Alberta’s Canmore Nordic Centre. Grey says passion was a driving factor.

“You aren’t going to succeed and you aren’t going to do well unless you are passionate and like what you are doing,” he says.

An Impressive Career on the World Stage

Grey achieved great success during his ski racing career. Some highlights for him include passing famous Norwegian cross country skier Petter Northug to achieve eighth place in the 30-kilometre pursuit at the Vancouver Olympics.

George Grey competing with National Ski Team.

George Grey's competitive experience as part of the Canadian National Ski Team gives him a world of knowledge and skill taking him boldly into a new career as a nurse. — Photo courtesy Selkirk College

“He doesn’t always win… one point for Grey,” he says.

That same Olympics in 2010, he placed eighth in the 50-kilometre race

In 2011, it was time to retire after competing in his last FIS Nordic World Ski Championship in Norway, the birthplace of his beloved sport. He returned to Canmore for one last Canadian National Championship and won all three distance events.

“At that point, I had done close to 100 world cups and five world championships and competed in my second Olympics. I am sure I could have qualified for another Olympics, but I also felt that I had reached my potential and so it was the right time for me to say thank you to ski racing and embrace new opportunities,” he says.

Grey also had his first child on the way. After being on the road seven months of the year with skiing, it was time for family, focusing on being a husband and father, and time for new challenges and experiences in life. And home to the Kootenays he came.

“I’d traveled the world. I might be biased because I grew up here, but the Kootenays are amazing. They offer a lot of the things that the most written about places in the world offer – and then more. It’s a desirable place to live,” he says.

A Major Crossroads in Life

Deciding on his next career wasn’t as easy for Grey. He’d always envisioned himself studying finance and becoming an investment banker but soon after starting on that path, he quickly learned “that type of stress wasn’t the type of stress I wanted to bring to my life and my family’s life.”

“It wasn’t a fit and so I went back to the drawing board. I would never have thought I’d be in the Nursing Program when I was skiing. It wasn’t on the radar. Not one little bit,” he says.

A bit panicked without an idea about his future he did some soul searching, talking with friends and family. Looking back on his ski career, at times like these, mixed emotions come into play.

“Some people say, well you made a lot of sacrifices, but I see it as making choices,” he says. “Skiing versus school… There was a big choice to be made there, which direction I wanted to take life.”

“You look at your friends who are set up in their careers already for ten years and they’ve got this and that,” he says. “But at the same time the experience that I had, no one can ever take away from me. My wife grounds me saying ‘sure, you are back in school now but you have traveled the world and represented Canada at significant competitions.’”

Being part of the National Ski Team provided Grey with learning through life experience setting him up for his next career with communication and networking skills. He is focused, motivated and driven with good time management skills and a keen interest in team building. Appealing to that sensibility, Grey’s father, a retired surgeon, suggested his son spend some time in the operating room at the Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital in Trail to see what the nurses do.

“He said it’s a great job, very important to the team of medicine,” says Grey. “I found I could really see myself doing it.”

Studying Close to Home

Just after high school, before being called to the National Cross Country Ski Team, Grey took two fall semesters in the Selkirk College School of University Arts & Sciences. Returning to study in the Nursing Program was a sure thing.

“I’d heard Selkirk College had a reputable program. There’s a wait list which proves that,” he says. “The instructors and facilitators are excellent and give students a lot of one-on-one time which you don’t always get at bigger institutions so that was really appealing.”

Almost done year three of the four-year program, Grey’s experience at Selkirk College has been everything he’d hoped it would be. Student life hasn’t been easy with time for homework coming after his two young children are in bed for the night.

But being part of a close-knit class and having top notch instructors Grey feels part of a “very supportive community.”

“It doesn’t get any better than this. I can honestly say every instructor I’ve worked with has offered me something new and something exciting and different,” Grey says. “They want to help. They don’t distance themselves from you at any time and they’re always open to support you in any way. You feel like the instructors want you to succeed.”

With his fourth year and practical experience ahead, Grey feels come graduation, he will be ready to enter the work force. He envisions himself part of a team in the operating or emergency room and sees the varied options in the profession keeping him challenged and interested.

“I like a bit of excitement,” he says.

Grey enjoys interactions with people and looks forward to helping make “someone’s life a notch better,” he says.

Bringing Energy to a New Career Path

Passion fueled Grey’s successful career as a cross country ski-racer and knowing this compelling enthusiasm so deeply means needing it in his second career.

“It helped me know what passion is,” he says. “If I wasn’t passionate about nursing, I wouldn’t be in it. You have to love it.”

His first love of skiing is taking a temporary back seat as Grey juggles school, homework, and family life. But he still gets out on the Black Jack ski trails to volunteer his time and get in the occasional ski for himself.

“A big part of nursing is self-care. We talk about that a lot in our classes,” he says. “If I can get out for a ski once a week, I am happy.”

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