Top 26 Quotes & Sayings by Clara Hughes

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian athlete Clara Hughes.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
Clara Hughes

Clara Hughes, is a Canadian cyclist and speed skater who has won multiple Olympic medals in both sports. Hughes won two bronze in the 1996 Summer Olympics and four medals over the course of three Winter Olympics.

What I have to do now is figure where my passion is, and follow my heart; I've proven that if I have the passion for something then I can succeed. I haven't been listening to my heart in the last little while.
With athletes, it's never fully understood the level to which we push ourselves. Especially in an endurance sport.
I am kind of like a diesel. It is the cyclist in me. — © Clara Hughes
I am kind of like a diesel. It is the cyclist in me.
I've learned what it truly means to be Canadian and in turn I've been inspired to make a difference in the world, however small it's been.
My goal is to try to avoid a regular job.
The struggle I went through has value.
I have this thing I say to myself that 'tomorrow can be better.' And I remember that period in my life where I never felt like tomorrow could be better. It was always dread for the next day.
I love working with kids and I want to just be able to do it from my heart and not as a job.
I'm trying to let winning the world championships settle in right now before I begin training again shortly. During the skating season, we skate on average 20 kilometres a day. On top of that, we're riding a lot and lifting a lot of weights.
The only reason I've shared my story is to take that tiny baby step of breaking down the stigma attached to depression.
For 20 years I've had the privilege of representing Canada around the globe... first on the bike and then on my blades. The experiences have shaped me into who I am today.
I had some experience in dealing with people who have mental illness and depression, but I didn't see the signs in myself. I couldn't ask for help because I didn't know I needed help.
I love skating so much and I feel like every time I step out onto the ice, that's what I'm meant to do.
I am nowhere near my limit. I just want to see if there are such things as limits. I want to go and find out.
If you dream and you allow yourself to dream you can do anything. And that's what this Olympic medal represents.
I'll skate on concrete if I have to. I'm not worried about how fast the ice is. I'm worried about how fast I can go on the ice.
I've had so many experiences in cycling, but in some ways I have nothing left to prove. I have achieved more than I could have dreamed of, I've raced a lot longer than I thought I would. I know I can still be better, but I just don't know if I love it enough any more.
I want people to be inspired that I've always strived for excellence and I've always gone beyond what anybody ever thought I could do, what I thought I myself could do. And I've allowed myself to be inspired, kept my eyes open and my senses open to inspiration around me.
I was, without exaggeration, a delinquent teenager.
I still can't believe I won the Olympics. That's what I feel right now - completely alive as a human being. It's a really beautiful moment.
I've been in sport for 15 years now and I'm actually shocked at the changes. We had all these things, but we couldn't utilize them. They were not accessible to us. They're actually accessible right now.
That's what is most satisfying, is having overcome that pain. Pain that is so intense that when you finish, it feels like you're going to die. That's what I wanted, and that's what I got.
If you dream and you allow yourself to dream you can do anything. — © Clara Hughes
If you dream and you allow yourself to dream you can do anything.
All the physical comes from the mental.
Sport that consumed me for over two decades . . . is now gone. Now it's just me. No pressure, no expectations, no need to be fast, good, strong or to even improve. Yet I can't let go of this idea that I always need to be more than I am. And it is eating me alive.
Ive had so many experiences in cycling, but in some ways I have nothing left to prove. I have achieved more than I could have dreamed of, Ive raced a lot longer than I thought I would. I know I can still be better, but I just dont know if I love it enough any more.
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