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Byline: Dave Gordon

More than physical strength

More than physical strength

Leah Goldstein shares her life story in No Limits. (photo from Leah Goldstein)

Leah Goldstein put the “severe” into persevere. The physical demands and rigors she has experienced in her life include being a kickboxing champion, a Taekwondo champion, a professional road-racing cyclist, an officer in the Israeli commando and elite police unit, and a participant on the Race Across America, a 3,000-mile bike trek. The B.C. local recently published her memoir, No Limits, outlining the triumphs and the tragedies of her athletic life.

Lessons in fortitude and grit began with her grandparents – survivors of the Shoah – trickling down to her parents, who arrived in Canada from Israel with very little English and a hundred dollars to their name. To make ends meet, her parents worked opposite shifts.

“It’s just the determination of somebody wanting something that bad, and would do anything to get there,” Goldstein told the Independent.

That would be something of a mantra throughout her life, beginning with Taekwondo lessons at age 9. By 16, she achieved a black belt as National Junior Champion. She then moved on to kickboxing. While jugging high school classes, she became World Bantamweight Kickboxing Champion.

As a teenager, her coach had her follow a strict regimen of “no smoking, no drinking, no friends, no phone, no junk food, and seven days a week of training. I did exactly what he said and I didn’t have a teenage life,” recalled Goldstein, now 47.

She went on to win a slew of championships provincially, nationally and in the United States. “Those sacrifices were worth the payoff at the end,” she conceded.

That distilled willpower carried into her Israeli military service. She became one of a handful of women instructors of the elite commando division and, later, a krav maga self-defence trainer for special unit soldiers.

Goldstein was one of only two women to successfully complete the harsh commando training of Course Madaseem, and the only woman out of about 30 recruits to graduate from a then newly established special program at the Israeli Police Academy. She went on to work in the undercover narcotics division, the intelligence services, anti-terrorism department, violent crime investigations, and was an instructor for officials and field workers.

In one 20-hour long grueling military training session that she describes, recruits subsisted on 30 minutes of sleep, then had to repeat the exercise. While many “dropped like flies,” she learned that survival depended largely on what “happens in our mind.”

That was a lesson that went back to her tournament days as a youth. As a second-degree black-belt kickboxer, she had won virtually every bout, but an admitted inflated ego led her to be distracted, and badly defeated, in one match in particular.

“Refocus, and be humble,” she recalled her coach insisting. “And, with every opponent that I had, or any challenges, treat it like it’s your biggest threat.”

When she left policing, she shifted to professional cycling. While her law enforcement career left her emotionally tattered, it was cycling that left her the most battered and bruised physically.

In a Pennsylvania race just prior to the 2004 Olympics, she fell off the bike, breaking her hand. And then, in 2005, after winning nine of her first 11 races, she was involved in what she calls “the mother of all crashes” during the Cascade Classic – she landed on her face at 80 kilometres an hour, “breaking practically every bone in my body, ripping my face right off.”

Doctors were astounded she survived at all, she said.

More astounding was her outlook on the situation: “I actually came back out of that stronger than I was prior.”

book cover - No Limits by Leah GoldsteinIt was in 2007 approximately when she started to consider taking David Spanner’s advice – he wrote a feature on her for the Province newspaper – to write a book for the purpose of inspiring others.

“I didn’t understand that at the time because, when you’re an athlete, you’re very self-absorbed and everything is about you,” she said.

The decision to write a book solidified as she did more public speaking engagements. Attendees were quite moved by her stories of resilience.

“I said, ‘Woah, if my story is really that powerful, and I can potentially change lives and help inspire, motivate people, then this book has to be written,’” she explained. “For many of us, it’s easy to be safe. We’re so afraid to fail. But part of succeeding is facing failure. I think it’s just having movement in life, and not watching great things that other people do, but starting to do great things and wowing yourself.”

Goldstein walked her talk or, rather, pedaled her talk, returning to the racing circuit in 2011, winning the women’s solo category of Race Across America, breaking the previous record by 12 hours.

“It’s really using your mind,” she said of perseverance. “When you feel every element of pain, and you’re exhausted and tired, and you just don’t want to be there – and then it starts raining and it’s minus-two degrees – it’s just all about being able to keep it together.”

Dave Gordon is a Toronto-based freelance writer whose work can be found in more than 100 publications globally. His is managing editor of landmarkreport.com.

Format ImagePosted on February 26, 2016February 25, 2016Author Dave GordonCategories BooksTags Leah Goldstein, sports
A BuzzFeed video master

A BuzzFeed video master

Allison Raskin, left, produces a weekly webseries, Just Between Us, with her best friend and comedy partner, Gaby Dunn. (photo from Allison Raskin)

Tens of millions of online viewers may have learned a little bit more about being Jewish after seeing Allison Raskin’s wacky BuzzFeed videos.

There, the young actor has brought her comedic take on many topics. Her Jewish shtick includes such witty shorts as 11 Things Jewish Friends Just Get, Christmas Explained by Jews, Jews Decorate Christmas Trees for the First Time and the Funny or Die video 1-800-4-Jew-Now, where nice Jewish girls Rebecca and Rachel make themselves available as fill-in dates for family get-togethers.

“Finding success on YouTube has been both the most exciting and confusing thing that has ever happened to me (other than my bat mitzvah),” she wrote recently on her blog.

Raskin, a Scarsdale, N.Y.-native, who now calls Los Angeles home, also performs improv and stand-up around Los Angeles, and produces a weekly webseries, Just Between Us, with her best friend and comedy partner, Gaby Dunn. With more than a hundred segments thus far, they tackle relationship issues in an irreverent and unconventional manner.

“Basically, it’s two girls on a couch giving love advice, but we’re terrible at giving advice,” explained Raskin. “That’s the shtick. It’s not at all about the questions or advice, but about our relationship. People say we’re the odd couple, a classic comedy approach.”

The Jewish Independent recently caught up with Raskin.

DG: What videos of yours are your favorites?

AR: A couple of contenders for different reasons. If Buying Condoms Was Like Buying Birth Control, I’m really proud of that one because I think it had a message and did really well. From a comedic level, that didn’t do well, but the writing was good. The other, Is This a Date?, is a sketch I liked. It’s a miscommunication between a man and a woman, and how their dialogue confused each other.

DG: You’ve done a few videos with Jewish content. Is our heritage and culture inherently funny?

AR: We all know how our families behave. Sometimes there’s a larger familiarity people will get even if they’re not a part of your family. I find things funny in my family and people I grew up with that I’m sure are funny to other people also.

DG: So, how do you make a Jewish video funny to people who don’t know about Jewish culture?

AR: The hope is that you’ll relate, even if you’re not Jewish or have a lot of Jewish friends that get it. At the end of the day, everyone is just human and we all do just funny things. My sister is married to an Italian and their family is very similar to ours. It’s all about the food; everyone is into each other’s lives, it’s all just loud and fun and caring. Even if they’re Roman Catholic, there’s a lot of similar culture there. And Italian has always been our favorite food.

DG: Are any of your comedic influences Jewish?

AR: My friends flatter me and say I’m like a female Woody Allen, but I know they’re just sucking up. But I definitely relate to some aspects of his point of view and I think that there are certain neuroses that I bring to some of my characters that are similar.

Other than that, one comedic influence is Julia Louis-Dreyfus (not Jewish). She has such presence – timeless and perfect and commanding. I love Veep.

DG: Is comedy natural to you?

AR: I think you either have it or you don’t. Have spark of it, or don’t. But you have to nurture and grow with that spark. It’s something you study and refine over years, with stand-up especially. Refining just my presence on stage took a long time, not just the actual jokes, but how I would deliver them was a whole journey. Just have to kind of need to love it.

All I ever want to do is to make a good joke. That’s what drives me day in and day out. Not just on the internet, but also to my best friends.

DG: What’s the environment like with other BuzzFeed actors?

AR: It’s definitely work; but it’s like working at a college campus – everyone is friends, we hang out, it’s great, awesome to be surrounded by young, talented people who want to do the same stuff you want to do. So, it’s definitely a fun office. I’ve been to my dad’s law office and it’s nothing like that.

DG: You’ve done some of the famous taste-test videos of ethnic foods. What would you eat again?

AR: Boiled peanuts. Everything in the Southern taste test was incredible. Okra was incredible. All I think about now is okra and boiled peanuts and how to get them.

DG: Have you tried okra in beef stew?

AR: I don’t eat beef, so maybe I’d pick it out. I’ve been a vegetarian for ethics reasons since I was 8, but now I eat birds and fish.

DG: BuzzFeed fans found out through the Jewish videos that there are other young Jewish actors at BuzzFeed. Do you guys hang out or talk Jewish stuff?

AR: Nah, maybe like “Oh, what are you doing for Passover? Hmm, nothing.” A lot of people were shocked that more than one Jew works at BuzzFeed.

Most of my friends, oddly enough, are Jewish and there’s shared culture there. I thought, with the video of Jews explaining Christmas, some online comments were antisemitic, and then the one with Christians explaining Chanuka nobody cared about.

DG: Did it upset you?

AR: I grew up surrounded by Jews, so I forget that there’s a lot of antisemitism in the world.

DG: What’s funny about being Jewish?

AR: Um, my mother. I just think the traditional Jewish mom is so funny to me. It’s already been passed on; if someone doesn’t call me back, I think they’re dead. I really have to work on my anxiety about thinking everyone’s dead.

DG: OK, pop quiz. Just like in the videos: A Jew explains Easter. Go!

AR: Oh, crap. That’s the one where Jesus is born, no, dies? He dies, right? Something about bunnies and chocolate? Lent, where you swear off doing something? The stores are closed?

Dave Gordon is a Toronto-based freelance writer and managing editor of landmarkreport.com.

Format ImagePosted on July 24, 2015July 22, 2015Author Dave GordonCategories TV & FilmTags Allison Raskin, BuzzFeed

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