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>>Sam Masekela: Tell me about that guy in 2009 that was on top of the world snowboarding.
You had just beaten Shaun White on the road to the Olympics. Tell me about that guy on
the top of the world. >>Kevin Pearce: So I've obviously been thinking
a lot about this and I thought how am I going to start this? I need something impactful.
I need something powerful that these people will listen to and maybe they'll get off their
phones and be like, okay, let's hear what this kid has to say. So I was like, all right,
I got this. It came to me, and here it is. I was like very, very few people in this world
know what it's like to be at the very top of something, and that's where I was. I mean,
I made it to the top. I had beaten Shaun White, like you said. I was one of the best snowboarders
in the world. And then I was like, yes, that's perfect. I nailed it. That's what I'm going
to give it to them. And last night I did the dinner with you guys, and then I heard everyone
today, and it's like the most amazing group of people. And I was like, wow, terrific.
These people are all the top at what they do and the best at what they do. So now it's
not really going to work for me. So I was like got to think of something new.
And then it came to me. I was like I made it to the top. And, you know, you guys in
this room all understand what it takes to get to the top of something, but I think what
you guys don't really exactly -- you know, haven't all experienced is, you know, what
it's like to go from there and then get to the very bottom in the blink of an eye. And,
you know, that's what I felt. That's what happened to me.
>>Sam Masekela: You were basically tuning up for the 2010 Olympics. It was being hyped
up, this amazing battle between you and Shaun. You were the first person to really show that
he actually had an armor that could be penetrated. And the whole snowboarding world was like,
yes! Kevin! Finally, someone can take the crown from the flying tomato.
And then, like you said, (snaps finger) in the blink of an eye, everything changes.
I want to know two things. One, what was your last memory of snowboarding before the injury?
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, it's crazy, because there's so much loss there that I
just don't remember. And, you know, the last memory was the day before, and the next memory
was when I got back on my snowboard two years later.
>>Sam Masekela: That's the span of memories in two years.
>>Kevin Pearce: Yep, of snowboarding. >>Sam Masekela: That's crazy.
When that injury happened and you got hurt, it reverberated throughout the entire snowboard
community at first, and I was hosting the X Games right after you got hurt and everyone
had stickers on their snowboards. Every competitor, every guy that this guy had beat or competed
against, every athlete from every different support, everyone had a sticker on their helmet,
on their boards that said "I ride for Kevin." And there was this uncertainty as to what
was going to happen to you because a lot of people wondered is he even going to make it.
But then you start to pull through, and you go through this am missing transformation.
Your first memory, you said, is getting back on your snowboard. Do you remember, is there
anything at all that sort of leads up to that? >>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, well, the very first
memory was a month and a half after. I was in -- I got flown to the University of Utah
where I spent 27 days in critical care, and then two weeks in acute care. And, you know,
when they flew me from there to the rehab hospital a month and a half later, I was in
the airplane and I was, like, -- they were like, oh, we're going to fly you and I was
like yes, I'm going to get in this nice jet and they're going to take me over to this
rehab hospital. It ended up being this loud-*** propeller plane, and I just remember this
loud plane. I was like what am I doing in here? And it was just such an awful experience,
so I think that's why I remember it. [ Laughter ]
>>Sam Masekela: The Crash Reel, obviously big movie. HBO, get nominated for an Oscar.
Give you a little something for that. Nothing wrong with being nominated for an Oscar.
How did the movie come about? How did you end up with Lucy Walker? And how did this
story go from something that was just a story from within snowboarding and action sports
to the world? >>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, that was incredible
that, you know, this film -- and you know it's incredible that you guys all got a copy
of it because it was so amazing to meet Lucy and have this done because, you know, then
I had the ability to share this with the world, whereas, you know, I would hope that nobody
in this room would know what I look like -- you want to go to that next slide -- what I look
like -- that I looked like that, and that that happened to me. And then having this
story being able to be shared has been so powerful, and there's so much to it. And,
you know, having this family and having this support and having this love that has gotten
me here has just been the most amazing thing ever.
>>Sam Masekela: How important was it for you to have the type of family that you did? Your
family from snowboarding, but then the real power of your immediate family in this process
to really heal and get to the place where you are now?
>>Kevin Pearce: You know, they're the reason that I'm here, and, you know, I'm sitting
in this chair and doing as well as I am, is because of the amount of love and, you know,
the amount of help. And it all -- you know, it all starts with, you know, my mom, this
is the -- >>Sam Masekela: This is you recovering right
here. >>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you want to go to that
next one. That is -- this is my first day back. And,
you know, I got back on my board because my mom and dad were, like, Kevin, we're not going
to come to the hospital if you don't have a helmet on. And I listened to my parents
and I was damn lucky that day I listened to them because they said I wouldn't have made
it without a helmet on. And, you know, it all started there and, you know, them spending
the entire time in the hospital and the rehab hospital and just -- I mean, that's what's
shown best about this movie is what they did for me.
>>Sam Masekela: One of the biggest arguments in that movie was when you sit there at dinner
and you say to your family, after everything they've been through with you in the hospital,
"Hey, guys, I want to snowboard again. I'm going to snowboard again." And then all hell
breaks loose. >>Kevin Pearce: They just wanted to kill me.
Especially my brother Dave, who has Down's Syndrome. He was like, "you cannot do double
corks. You cannot do that." >>Sam Masekela: I guess the question for everyone
is why? What is it about snowboarding? What connects you to snowboarding in a way that
you felt you'd be willing to put it all at risk again, now with all the serious issues
that you came away from with your injury, why still snowboard?
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, I feel like a lot of this room understands that feeling
you get when, you know, you get really good at something and, you know, you are really,
really good. And that's where I was at snowboarding. And it did something special for me that,
you know, it's hard to explain that feeling you get when you get to that level. But I
was there, and it was just I had that freedom. And I had -- I had it. And it was, like, I
don't know, it's hard to explain, but -- and then I lost it, and I wanted it back.
>>Sam Masekela: And what was this day like? >>Kevin Pearce: That was special to get back
to it. And, you know, it was in a much different way now that I snowboard, but having the ability
to actually get back and do that again and to feel that and to feel that freedom has
been amazing. >>Sam Masekela: I'm sitting here with you.
I've known you for almost ten years now, and I'm having a back-and-forth conversation where
anyone can see it's a miracle that you came back from the type of injury that you sustained.
But what are the challenges that you have to face every day that you deal with that
we don't see in your everyday life that remind you everyday when you wake up that you've
suffered a brain injury that will affect the rest of your life?
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, that's a hard one. And that's the hardest part about this,
is because it's, you know, so invisible and you can't tell. And yet every single day,
without a question, no -- I don't even have to think about it. For four and a half years
I have been reminded of what happened to me on December 31st.
Is there something that happens? Every single day that comes up. And it can always be different.
And, you know, I'm starting to find ways to -- to not get rid of it because it's never
going to go away because my brain's always going to be injured, but finding ways to heal
it and to continue to get it better and, you know, to take the positives out of this instead
of feeling bad for myself. >>Sam Masekela: So one of the things that
you -- some of the things that you have to do just to sort of -- just to keep things
every day, like with your memory and what have you.
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, they're interesting things like exercise. You know, getting out
there and going for runs. And a big one's been yoga for me and getting -- getting in
that yoga room. Got up this morning and did that yoga class. And doing these little things
that, you know, I find so releasing and, you know, so healing for me.
>>Sam Masekela: Which leads us to that super cool hippy shirt you're wearing, "Love Your
Brain," which has been really the lasting message to come out of all this. You have
been this big advocate for Love Your Brain. What is Love Your Brain?
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, loving your brain is more than just, you know, what you
see when this comes up. Love Your Brain and you see it and you're like, all right, love
your brain, and you see it an you're like, all right, love your brain, cool. But it's
so important for somebody that injures their brain to love your brain. I tell you, I'm
reminded every day. I do such stupid things. And instead of -- now I've learned this. Instead
of getting down on myself and calling myself an idiot, oh you're so an stupid for knocking
that water over, that is so damaging for your brain. It's so bad for you, these negative
thoughts. It's obviously not physically bad, but in there it's like not allowing these
wires to reheal and reconnect. And it's like learning that has helped me heal in such a
huge way. And then if you haven't injured your brain,
you know, maybe if you're like my brother who has Down's Syndrome or if you're just
a regular person out there, maybe taking life a little bit less seriously, and when you
do something stupid to just kind of, you know, look past that and understand that it's not
life ending. >>Sal Masekela: We had a conversation about
a year ago after we went snowboarding together, one of the first times after you had been
back. And you said to me, "I really want to figure out what to do with my life now because
all I know how to do is to be a professional athlete. I was the best in the world. I need
to figure out what to do." But now you've become this very, very powerful
voice. Tell me some of the things that you're doing and what "Love Your Brain" is becoming
as far as your public speaking, et cetera, and what the message is that you are trying
to get across. >>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, I think one
of the most important messages that we can do with this is, you know, get it out to the
kids and teach these kids. You know, I'm guessing I've talked to some of you, not all of you,
but I'm guessing that from the look of this room, most of you guys have kids. And, you
know -- >>Sal Masekela: Translation: You're a little
bit old. [ Laughter ]
>>Kevin Pearce: I don't. I don't have a girlfriend yet, so I haven't found any kids.
But from what I hear, you guys all love your kids, and all you want is for your kids to
be safe. And in order for your kids to be safe, you know, the most important thing they
can do is love their brain and take care of their brain.
And, you know, it is such small things: Put a helmet on when you get on a bike. Not texting
in the car. Not talking to people in the car. These little things that you can teach your
kids that you know is so important. >>Sal Masekela: One of the interesting numbers
that we see here is -- we probably take for granted how often these type of injuries happen
to people. We were talking earlier, you mentioned every 23 seconds there's a traumatic brain
injury. The numbers here that we see 0 to 19 -- kids up to 19 years of age, 173,000
cases a year. What are some of the things that you think we can do as a culture to help
minimize that? And we can just speak specifically starting with a place like action sports.
>>Kevin Pearce: Yeah, you know, my message here is not -- is -- I don't want people to
see this and be like, "Oh, I shouldn't go snowboard" or "I shouldn't go out and do this."
It is like I want people to get out there, and I want you to live, and I want you to
have as much fun as possible. But I feel like the real message with this
is to be smart and to be safe. And you can get out there and you can do these things,
but you can do it in the right way. You can put a helmet on. You know, you can not get
on your phone when you're in the car. And there's so many ways that you can do this
and just be smart about it. >>Sal Masekela: I think that you making the
choice to decide to become a real voice for this injury and really giving other people
the opportunity, you had two big families. You had this big family of pro snowboarding
and then your amazing family that were all able to stop what they were doing to help
you heal. But there are a lot of kids out there and a lot of people who are having these
type of injuries who don't have the same type of a network.
Is that what you want to do with "Love Your Brain," is to help give those people the same
sort of opportunity to heal? >>Kevin Pearce: That's a huge piece of this,
to get out there and to help these people that, you know, don't have what I have. When
you watch this movie, you will see I had everything. I have the most amazing family ever. Little
example, my brother is here. He is getting married in four days, but he's here with me
helping me do what I can do. And it is just kind of -- not everybody has that. And it
is, you know -- we all know that not everyone has amazing families.
I feel like there is a lot of amazing families in this room, and we are very lucky for that.
But it is like helping these kids that don't is very powerful.
>>Sal Masekela: This is a room of very powerful people. And if you have not had the chance
yet to have a conversation with this amazing human being named Kevin Pearce, I highly suggest
you do so and figure out ways that you can get involved so that we can make this thing
like simple brain injury something that can go away and, like you said, just make the
simple idea of putting on a helmet something that's cool for kids.
Kevin, you are a miracle. I'm happy to call you a friend. And thank you for taking the
time to share your story today. [ Applause ]