It would be easy for Jessie Diggins to give people the answer they expect. Whenever the Afton native is asked whether making the Olympic team would fulfill a lifelong dream, she knows they assume the Winter Games are the ultimate goal for any cross-country skier, the only payoff that could make all that sweat and pain worthwhile.
Diggins pondered that last week, just after arriving in Sochi, Russia -- site of the 2014 Winter Olympics -- for a World Cup competition. In her first full season as a member of the United States A Team, she has made history, winning the first-ever medals for her country in two events. She has laughed with her teammates at their inability to communicate with Russian plumbers, watched reindeer cross the road in Finland, stood on a podium with happy tears streaking her red, white and blue face paint.
As a young star on the rising U.S. cross-country team, Diggins, 21, expects to return to Sochi one year from now as an Olympic athlete. That is not what drove her to pass up an academic scholarship at Northern Michigan to try life as a ski racer. The three-time high school state champion from Stillwater already is living out her athletic dream, competing at the top international level of her sport as part of a close-knit team.
Diggins understands that most Americans notice cross-country ski racing only during the Olympics, if at all. Few outside of her family and friends know she anchored the U.S. to its first medal in a World Cup relay event last November in Sweden, or that she teamed with American star Kikkan Randall two weeks later to earn her country its first gold in a World Cup team event.
It would sound better to most ears, Diggins speculated, if she said what was expected and declared that everything else was just a leadup to the Winter Games. Except it wouldn't be true, not for a woman who feels every day as an elite athlete is as good as gold.
"The Olympics have been a big goal for a long time," said Diggins, who currently is ranked 37th overall in the World Cup standings. "But in the USA, we put them on such an incredible pedestal. For me, it's been more about the process.
"When I started out, what I really liked was the lifestyle. Just getting to train so much all year and be outside, and go to these amazing places and see them from an angle most people never get to. We're on the road, having fun, and we're doing things Americans have never done before. That's really cool."
Dedication needed