I tell people I'm too stupid to know what's impossible. I have ridiculously large dreams, and half the time they come true.


So I went for engineering, specifically product design, which I enjoyed.

My skating is a very emotional thing that comes from the heart, never doing it for the medal.

My mother introduced me to many different things, and figure skating was one of them. I just thought that it was magical having to glide across the ice.

Just because you didn't start out perfect doesn't mean you can't have an excellent result in the end.

Probably the '86 nationals. That was my first real national title and first real statement I ever made in figure skating, and my life changed after I returned.

What was most important to me at the Olympics was going out there and performing my best. When I messed up the first jump combination, which was my big move, it hit me that I messed up the program of my life.

But I like it when my patients are impressed not knowing that I was an Olympian.