By
Becky Moore
Just
before leaving my full-time position as the grant writer and public affairs
officer for a non-profit organization providing housing, medication, and
supportive services for folks living with HIV/AIDS, I was on the panel that
interviewed and hired the new Director of Housing. He was a crowd pleaser … big
and broad and incredibly sexy. A brick shithouse kind of man with carved
shoulders as sharp as Michelangelo’s David. A little moody, a lot stand-offish, and a quiet
introvert. He and I worked really well together because we didn’t manage each
other, weren’t on the same team, and he could let his guard down with my
married self. He was a sprinter, and training for the Olympics. Oh, yeah.
I
was disheartened to learn last month that he’d been injured and unable to
attend the final preliminary trials, but am happy to have been a peripheral
part of his journey for the last three years. My son is a soccer player and a
runner, and loved to talk to James about how to make his body work more
efficiently. Our family is really active, but our son has runs circles around
my soul mate and I. Plus, who wants to listen to your mom talk about high
school Varsity soccer, or college intermural soccer when you have a real, live
quasi-Olympian? Geesh.
It
was learning to think about his body as a machine, a tool for his trade of fast
footwork that helped our son figure out that stretching out is a benefit;
jogging in between soccer practice and games is a good thing; and hydrating
well is next to godliness. It’s a mindset, for sure.
We
don’t typically watch sports on television, but the Olympics are different.
When do you get to watch Dressage, synchronized diving, water polo, beach
volleyball, skeet shooting, javelin throwing, and rowing in the same day? It’s
great. But then again, when do you get to see world-class, high-powered, super-fit
men and women athletes crammed together in one general location? Only at the
Olympics.
I
first tuned in to the Olympic Village sex scene about six years ago when I
started my job at AAS-C (the HIV/AIDS
organization). The Prevention Education department was one of my favorite group
of people to work with because not only were they the frontline community
defense against the spread of HIV disease … if you don’t have HIV disease, then
you need to know how to NOT get it; and if you have it, then you need to know
how to NOT spread it … but they always had the best stories and toys. Because
they ordered condoms and packets of lubrication in the hundreds of thousands
each year, they were like the superstars of the Trojan world. And after the Beijing Summer
Olympics in 2008, we fought over the cool posters that came in the condom
packaging. Turns out the extracurricular activities at the Olympic Village share
Las Vegas’ credo: what happens at the Village stays at the Village.
If you haven’t
seen them, you’re probably not alone. I worked in the industry and had no idea
about them, or the Olympic condom situation. Well, could be it’s because I’ve
been married since 1994 and our relationship is monogamous, and condoms are
so not on our radar. The ads were great fun, but the statistics are so much
better. Think the athletes are chaste virgins? Nope. They’re animals in the
prime of their physical development. Ripped, raring and ready to go. Thank
goodness for condoms, because all of the games are inevitable.
I
find I prefer the debauchery. I mean, it’s pretty amazing to see Michael Phelps
flying through the water, surging ahead of his international competition. But
it’s the possibility of a glimpse of those abs and oblique’s that hold
my eyes glued to the boob tube. Seriously. Good grief, is
there anything more disappointing than thinking Phelps goes back to his room
and plays Pinochle every night?
Here
are some interesting articles. Maybe they’ll set you on the path to a more
streamlined, active self. If you could play at the Olympic Village, it would be
worth a couple of sit-ups, huh?
9 comments:
Looks great! Oh--I've got to go. The water polo team just took to the water!
I think the condoms looking like the Olympic Rings are a hoot. A view of the Olympic "Games" I'd not thought of before.
Great blog! That's something I never knew, and the condom company must love the Olympics!
I have really enjoyed watching the male divers with their little speedo's on ;) If I enjoy them on TV I can only imagine who is enjoying them in the village up close.
Makes me wonder how the condoms are distributed...do they sign them out? are they handed out to everyone? or do they have them sitting around in candy dishes?
That's a good question, Laci. At my former agency, we had condoms and packets of lube in bowls on the desk. They were available for people to just walk in and get some. We figured at least they were being smart for whatever number of condoms they took. My guess, with these athletes, is that however appealling it might seem to hook up with someone, they understand the importance of their physical health. I bet STDs and pregnancy are SO not on their training agendas.
at leat the Olympic are not jugeing the gay or bi form the sport they are just human and they re greet people
Play hard and play safe! I wonder if that order of more condoms was done as a joke. I can imagine a group getting together and saying, let's tell the organizers we've run out. Olympic medal given for most times an athlete had sex!
Just read the total condom count was 150,000. That's like one per athlete per day.
Interesting post.
Sound good.
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