Having complemented her plethora of cycling medals with racing trophies and a famous fifth place in Cheltenham’s prestigious Foxhunter Chase, what does she say to other elite athletes looking to change fields?
“I probably underestimated the amount of transferable skills I had,” she says. “But for all the opportunities I’ve had, the sports I’ve tried and the challenges I’ve attempted, I realise that a lot of it’s to do with mental mindset resilience. It’s probably more in your head than it is in the rest of your body. Believe in that. Believe that you have something that can be malleable in many ways.”
Victoria points to a major turning point in her post-cycling career that galvanised that realisation. While working with legendary Team GB equestrian coach Yogi Breisner, she received the accolade ‘courageous’.
“I’d never been called courageous before, I thought ‘that’s a big word for a small me,’” she says. “Then I thought about it and tried it on, and it was something I’ve really embraced moving forward through my life.
“What is courage? You don’t have to earn it. You don’t have to deserve it. You don’t have to be born with it. It’s there if you want it. So, if you change your mindset, you can achieve a lot more than you can possibly imagine. Courage is my word.”
So, what does excellence mean to someone who has had the courage to break comfort zones and consistently take on new challenges?
“Excellence means never settling for where you are. Always striving to be better, never for one moment resting on your laurels.”
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