Kim Gaucher played on the Canadian women’s Olympic basketball team in Tokyo in 2021. She was a new mom at the time and still breastfeeding her daughter, Sophie. Babies weren’t allowed to sleep in the Olympic Village, so Gaucher’s husband and daughter stayed in a hotel nearby. She pumped between events, then her husband taxi’d over from the hotel to pick up the pumped breastmilk and give Gaucher some time with her daughter. Sounds like an exhausting logistical arrangement.
Babies are still not allowed to stay in the Olympic Village—but this year the IOC is a little more sympathetic to the challenges of athlete-parents. It has arranged for hotel accommodations close to the village for breastfeeding competitors and dedicated a space in the Olympic Village for a nursery. Created by P&G (the company that makes Pampers) as a sanctuary for parents for athlete-parents to breastfeed, change diapers and hang out, it will be equipped with books, toys and plush furniture. Tots will even get their own official accreditation cards so they can access the room with a caregiver.
In the August issue of Maclean’s, Rachel Heinrichs explores all the complex issues elite athlete-parents face today–physically, emotionally, sociologically. It’s a fascinating account of a new frontier.
—Sarah Fulford, editor-in-chief