With her three Olympic medals and 82 World Cup wins—a women’s record—skiing legend Lindsey Vonn, 38, may have seemed to be at the top of her game throughout her storied 19-year career.
But there were days when Vonn simply couldn’t get out of bed.
While residing in Park City, Utah after competing in her first Winter Games in 2002, Vonn learned that her parents were getting divorced. “I was living away from home, and I didn’t really have any resources. I didn’t have much support. I was maybe going to the gym at like, 7 p.m. at night, staying up all night and not getting out of bed during the day,” she told Know Your Value.
When she stopped wanting to go to the gym, Vonn knew she needed help.
Feeling stuck, unmotivated, helpless and hopeless—and worrying that her Olympic ambitions may have played a part in her parents’ relationship troubles—Vonn sought treatment. She initially began taking prescribed medicine to pull her out of her dark mental state. Then, she eventually sought the help of a therapist.
“Admitting that I needed help was the hardest part,” she told Know Your Value, “and then once I did, it was made such a big difference.”
Going public
Vonn dove deep into her first bout with depression in her new book, “Rise: My Story.” She wrote: “In a way, it’s like you stop being yourself, and turn into a person you don’t recognize. You feel hopeless, kind of like you’re falling deeper and deeper into a black pit and you’re powerless to stop it.”
Vonn didn’t tell anyone about her diagnosis at first. Instead, she compartmentalized it. She said, “I didn’t want people to think that I was weak.”
She decided to make her struggle public in 2012, after her divorce from ex-husband Thomas Vonn.
“I felt like there was a lot that I needed to unload, and I been carrying it for too long,” she said. “Once I did, it was a huge relief…. I realized that I wasn’t the only person dealing with it. And I think it was a really important move for me in my life, just getting it off my shoulders.”
The hard transition out of competitive life
Through the personal highs and lows, Vonn always had skiing.
“To a large degree, skiing was a coping mechanism for me,” she recounted. “It was part of my safe space and it’s really the only thing that was stable in my life … I struggled a lot, but I always found solace on the slopes.”
When Vonn retired from skiing in 2019 due to a series of injuries, which resulted in three surgeries in 10 months, she lost not only her career but her biggest depression-fighting tool. “I would definitely still be skiing if I physically could be. But, you know, it just got to the point where it’s a question of whether I’ll be walking when I’m 50,” Vonn said.








