Felicien’s memoir is about the lessons of resilience learned from her mom Cathy
TORONTO — The story of Perdita Felicien’s devastating crash at the 2004 Athens Olympics is well-known, and was also one of the most difficult chapters of her book to write.
But the foot injury that kept her out of the Beijing Games four years later, and the disastrous human error behind it, was nearly as big of a blow to the 40-year-old from Pickering, Ont.
In her book “My Mother’s Daughter: An Immigrant Family’s Journey of Struggle, and Grit and Triumph,” Felicien revealed that she fractured her foot at a practice in February of ’08 because the hurdles were laid down on the wrong lines, barrelling full-speed into a hurdle that was too close.
“I shot over the hurdle awkwardly and came down on the other side off balance, all the force of my 140-pound frame landing on the tips of my left toes,” she wrote. “Pop. I never hit the ground, but it felt like someone had driven a burning stake through the top of my foot.”