Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian athlete Tessa Virtue.
Last updated on April 21, 2025.
Given my travels, I've learned to be more open and feel much more comfortable experimenting with food.
You have your best workouts when you go in thinking you don't want to do it, because you're so satisfied with your own determination and grit.
School's always been very important to me.
What I love about Nivea is they're all about authenticity. The brand isn't pretending to be anything it isn't.
There's no easy way to the top of anything, but it's a lot of hard work and I feel maybe I have the confidence in that recipe, or the confidence in myself.
Hair and makeup has become part of my pre-competition routine. It's a quiet time, when I can reflect, I can put on some music - and I can mentally get in the zone of performance.
I think everyone struggles to feel comfortable in their skin or has at one time or another.
I love the idea of women empowering other women. We need to come together and support one another and embrace one another.
I think the way you present yourself to the world, whatever kind of task you're tackling, is really important.
There are many things I love about my job! For instance, as a creative outlet, there's no better way to express myself than through choreography and physical movement.
We're in a pressure-filled sport for sure, but anything in an Olympic season is heightened, the highs are higher and the lows are lower, and everything just takes on grander proportions.
I don't think I'm going to look back and wish that I spent more time worrying about my muscles or fat or whatever.
Hydration is a key thing, as an athlete yes, but also for your skin, and I do notice the biggest difference when I stay hydrated.
I do feel different whether I'm in the gym or on the ice when I have a cute outfit on. I think most girls can relate - you carry yourself differently.
I never want to be randomly posing with a product or putting my name to a brand arbitrarily.
I think that's the beauty of the Olympics. There's always a story. There's always someone you're invested in. There are so many Olympic moments that resonate with people all across Canada, and I think that's the beauty of it.
Everyone has those insecurities, everyone doubts themselves but it's how we handle that as humans and as people and how we support one another and how we really embrace the things that make us unique.
Anytime an athlete deals with an injury, it forces you to revaluate and refocus.
We found our joy in being athletes in PyeongChang. Our biggest joy was being on the ice. Every moment revolved around just what it would take to win the Olympics.
A lot of the figure skating costumes are kind of revealing, so I think it's nice to have glowing, soft, smooth skin.
For athletes, it is unhealthy to be one-sport focused, especially at a young age. I believe in exposing kids to lots of activities - there are great advantages to being a well-rounded athlete and human, no matter the field of play.
Women in figure skating, like in every other industry, are expected to conform to an unrealistic standard of beauty. Unhealthy habits are often encouraged to promote a thin frame, and young girls idealize a skewed definition of 'fit.'
When we're choreographing, we're on the ice five or six hours a day. The setting for your skin is just horrendous - the stress and the competition makeup and the training itself.
I am actually quite boring!
We've had the good fortune of performing to live music a few times in our career and it always creates a different dynamic.
I've always been such a private person. Even stepping into social media was a new world for me.
I want to ensure that I'm sending the right messages and that I'm empowering others, and doing things that feel like they're in line with my values.
I really want to learn French so I think it would be great to go and live in France and maybe learn the language for a few months.
At all times, there's discussion about the percentage of body fat I have, how I look on the ice and about how much skin a certain costume is showing.
I joined the Young Philanthropists Circle at the Musee Des Beaux Arts, we have little events every month where you learn about a different artist and you see the exhibit and you get an inside an inside look at the technique used.
Sometimes I need a pump-up song.
I always loved skating but you can get hardened by it and it's discouraging and disheartening.
When I am home on a weekend, you can bet I am relaxing in sweats!
Understanding my worth in the market is part of my job, and ensuring I am valued is important to me. I love negotiating, and do so frequently for contracts. I am fair and reasonable, but willing to walk away if a deal cannot be struck.
Long-term I would love to go to law school.
We come from a rich history of amazing sports and athletes here in Canada and there's been a long legacy before us that helped pave the way. And that's why I grew up believing I could go to the Olympics and stand on the podium one day.
I couldn't believe just how emotional I was about the London Olympics. Before the Games even started, I was reading a newspaper sitting in a hair salon and my mom looked over at me and I was just sobbing, because something about seeing the rings and hearing the athletes' excitement and just kind of knowing exactly what they were going through.
I have this platform that I've worked hard for, but now I want to make use of it.
I have a muscular build and I've learned to embrace that because it's makes me strong, giving me speed and power on the ice. It's a different kind of femininity - one that doesn't fit the norm.