By all accounts, -bound Kequyen Lam defies convention.
Born in Macau in 1979 to parents who had fled war-torn North Vietnam, and raised in Abbotsford, Lam admits he was a gifted athlete, but opted to attend UBC in Vancouver and study kinesiology and pharmacology.
Over the past 20 years, the 38-year-old pharmacist has competed at some of the highest levels in snowboard cross and cross-country skiing; written two books; manufactured an 鈥渁bout-to-be-released鈥 line of moustache wax; owned, sold and written about his beloved tiny house; and next month, he鈥檒l buckle up his ski boots and head to the Winter Games in PyeongChang.
Lam, who is currently based in Vernon, will compete as the sole 15-kilometre cross-country skate skier representing Portugal.
WATCH
Olympic athlete, Kequyen Lam reveals how it felt to learn that he had qualified to compete in the 2018 Winter Games.
His coach made the official announcement Thursday morning at where Lam has been training.
鈥淜equyen鈥檚 story to the Games is incredible,鈥 said Bond.
鈥淗e鈥檚 has been racing around the world the last two years and training hard to qualify (for the Olympics), and now it鈥檚 17 days away. Wow, time flies.鈥
Naturally, Lam is thrilled at the prospect of taking his talent to the international stage.
And while he knows the pressure is on, he feels it鈥檚 important to focus on how he got there.
鈥淚 was born to compete. Training and competing feeds my soul.鈥 - Kequyen Lam
鈥淚n 1978 my parents risked it all for our family鈥檚 safety,鈥 Lam explained.
鈥淚t was a month-long voyage in a rickety, over-capacity sea vessel 鈥 my dad, my mom and my brother 鈥 and every second they were afraid. That boat could have capsized at any moment.鈥
Lam said his family was welcomed to Macau, which was a Portuguese territory until 1999, where they lived in a refugee camp. After Lam was born, his family immigrated to Canada and settled in Abbotsford.
He says sports were always a big part of his life, but he didn鈥檛 pursue a career as an athlete until after he graduated from university and worked in his field.
In 2008, he decided to 鈥渟eriously鈥 pursue snowboard cross, and came close to qualifying for the 2014 Winter Games. But a serious injury he sustained at a training camp in Austria prevented him from getting to Sochi.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a dangerous sport 鈥 I mean, you鈥檙e going over 60-foot jumps at 70 kilometres an hour. Any small mistake can land you in the hospital. I was living in a state of fear (at the time),鈥 he recalled.
On the last day of training camp, Lam mistimed a feature and ended up crashing.
鈥淚 blew out my shoulder. I was devastated, but at the same time it was huge relief because that meant I didn鈥檛 have to go up and risk my life again.鈥
Lam began his recovery, but soon after the 鈥渃ross-country skiing seed鈥 that had been planted in his head a few years earlier by another athlete 鈥渂egan to take root.
鈥淚 had been determined to get to Sochi doing snowboard cross, but after I was injured I knew that wouldn鈥檛 happen, and I accepted that it was meant to be that way 鈥攖hat I wasn鈥檛 meant to go, but at the same time, I felt like something was missing. I was born to compete. Training and competing feeds my soul. 鈥
He began training and pursued his other passions 鈥 he built a tiny home in Squamish, which he recently sold. And wrote about the experience in his book, Tiny Home Haikus.
His other book, Into the Mind of an Olympic Athlete, which has been described as 鈥渁n inside look into the experience of being at the starting line of an Olympic event,鈥 will be available online soon.
Lam gives a tour of his passion project, a tiny house he built in Squamish.
Lam, who says he has also become somewhat of a facial hair enthusiast, recently began manufacturing his own brand of mustache wax called Lamstache. He says it鈥檚 more of a side project 鈥渇or fun鈥 than a serious business venture, but notes that it will be available on the market this year.
For the time being, Lam says all other projects are on temporary hold while he heads off to the Winter Olympics 鈥攁n experience he says he still can鈥檛 believe he will finally get.
He credits his parents for much of his success and says he hopes his story will inspire children with parents who are new to Canada, to follow their own dreams, no matter how big.
鈥淚鈥檓 the result of what my parents lived through, and the risks that they took. I鈥檓 an immigrant, my parents are refugees and I couldn鈥檛 be more proud of that because from that it shows that hard work and dreams that you dream and sacrifice is all worth it in the end.鈥
The 2018 Winter Games take place in PyeongChang, South Korea, Feb. 9 to 25.
Erin Christie
Morning Star Staff