Let’s not call it redemption or vindication. Those words imply a mistake was made. It’s not really a comeback either. That suggests her past success had been interrupted by failure. What Simone Biles achieved Tuesday by winning the bronze medal in the balance beam was something closer to equilibrium, the state of balance.
Prior to the Tokyo Olympics, the 24-year-old was seen as America’s greatest hope. Her withdrawal from team and individual competitions changed all that — a consequence of the dreaded “twisties,” a dangerous, disorienting condition in which a gymnast loses mental focus and sense of body movement in space. Winning what is almost certainly the final medal of her Olympic career on the final individual event was how she stuck the landing.
I like that ending. I like that ending more than if the queen of American gymnastics had torn up the mats in Tokyo, winning golds at every stage, and dominated the competition. Here’s what Simone Biles is beyond being scary-good at launching herself into the air and performing acrobatics that no other person can match: She’s a human being subject to the same limitations that all human beings face. Yes, she has more physical gifts than most of us will ever know. And she has the drive and focus to use them. How many hours has she spent practicing these skills? How many setbacks has she overcome? How many demons has she battled including a certain sex offender disguised as a team doctor?
It must have been incredibly hard for Biles, America’s beloved champion, to sit out all those events and instead root for her teammates. But this is exactly how life works. We work hard. We do our best. But sometimes it is not good enough. Sometimes, we come up far short of expectations. In moments like those, can we accept that we did not win? Can we appreciate the success of others? Can we hold our heads up high?