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Being a high performer in life

Dr. Kimberley Amirault-Ryan was the speaker for the fifth annual Independent Well Servicing Safety Stand Down, held at Estevan’s Southeast College campus on Jan. 16. The event is put on each year with the co-operation of Crescent Point Energy Corp.
Dr. Kimberley Amirault-Ryan
Dr. Kimberley Amirault-Ryan, left, spoke to nearly 200 service rig workers at the fifth annual Independent Well Servicing Safety Stand Down on Jan. 16. Photo by Brian Zinchuk

Dr. Kimberley Amirault-Ryan was the speaker for the fifth annual Independent Well Servicing Safety Stand Down, held at Estevan’s Southeast College campus on Jan. 16.

The event is put on each year with the co-operation of Crescent Point Energy Corp., who shuts down their service rig fleet for the afternoon so that crews from the numerous service rig companies that work for them can take part. There were 194 people in attendance.

Amirault-Ryan has a PhD in psychology. She is a counselling psychologist who specializes in high performance athletics. This has included heading up the sport psychology efforts for Canada for five Olympic Games, working with the Canadian Olympic hockey team, the NBA’s New York Knicks and the NHL’s New York Rangers, Columbus Blue Jackets and Edmonton Oilers. She lives in Calgary and Vernon, B.C.

While she works in high performance athletics, the oilpatch is never far from her mind, as her husband, Rick Ryan, has been heavily involved through the years with various companies – Ryan Energy Technologies and Matrrix Energy Solutions Inc., (which purchased, then changed its name to Stampede Drilling). His current efforts are in a company called roundLAB Inc.

“I’m very well aware of what’s going on, especially the challenges in the oilpatch,” she said before her presentation.

Amirault-Ryan’s focus was on excellence – what the best in the world do. She spoke about organizations that have long-term success and how they do it, and the things they do personally and professionally to be the best in the world.

She tied it in with safety, so that in being your best, people around you are also at their best.

Her first day on the job with the New York Rangers was Sept. 11, 2001.

Amirault-Ryan was walking downtown to Madison Square Garden for 9 a.m. that fateful morning, just as the attacks occurred.

“I was feeling really nervous, because it was the first time a woman had ever been hired to do all the mental performance for a men's pro team. I’m going to be the only woman with 150 men. So I decided I would calm myself down by walking to Madison Square Garden,” she said.

It was a 10-block walk. “Five minutes into my walk, all of a sudden there are millions of people running in this direction. I get knocked over. I lose everything out of my bag. I’m throwing everything back in my bag, I grab my phone and I call my mom in Nova Scotia.

“I said, ‘Something is wrong. Everybody told me New York is crazy, but something is really wrong.’

“Then, my phone went dead. The reason my phone went dead is the cellphone towers went down because the first plane had hit the World Trade Center. The first day on the job was 9/11.”

“I share that story because not every day is as stressful as 9/11, but we are all living in such a stressful world, where we have so much going on, personally or professionally, and yet you’re still expected to perform, and be at your best, obviously. Safety, being aware, being sharp,” she said.

Amirault-Ryan said that in sport, the tone is set in the locker room. 

She used an example of holding a water bottle up at arm’s length. It’s not so much the weight, but how long you can hold it there. “This is the same thing as our stress. The absolute weight does not matter, it’s how long you can carry it for,” she said, referring to stress from a week ago, a month ago or even a year ago.

“If you have not worked it through, you cannot carry on as a high performer,” she said.

She divides the world into energy givers and takers, giving an example of how a high performer was trying out for the men’s Olympic team with the best players in the country. But one had a tendency to complain. And when they put him on the fourth line, he brought down that line. “He decreased the level of play on that line,” she said.

Then they tried him on the first line, with the superstars. He made a mistake, and through complaining increased the stress on that line. But when they brought on an energy giver, a superstar, onto the fourth line, it improved. The energy-taker didn’t make the team, but that whole fourth line, without him, did.

“Every single one of us has a choice, every day, to have a world-winning attitude, or have negative behaviour. When we’re at our best, we make the world around us better,” she said.

Amirault-Ryan spoke about thinking of goals you’d like to accomplish.

Women’s hockey legend Hayley Wickenheiser had broken her foot, meaning she would have to stay off it for seven months if she was to play at the Sochi Olympics. Instead of running hill sprints five times a week, she would crawl those hill sprints, five times a week. Wickenheiser set up an area in her garage where she could keep practising her shots, while in a chair, all that time. She ended up not only competing in the games, but being Canada’s flag-bearer. And after winning another gold medal she retired and went into medical school. She now works with the Maple Leafs in player development.