Apparently the universe really wants me to watch olypmic judo.
The CBC is streaming a
live video feed
of the finals and semifinals of the judo competitions. This is
extremely awesome, because in previous years you were extremely
fortunate to catch much judo on TV if indeed any at all.
The admittely minor downside is that there only seems to be a live feed
and with the time difference, that means that the action starts around
6am EDT.
I'd hoped to watch as much of the coverage as I could, but if I'm up late
or don't sleep well, trying to get up at 6 in the morning will make me
nonfunctional for the rest of the day. Since this is the case, I haven't
actually set an alarm to wake up in time to watch judo. As it turns out,
though, I haven't needed to -- two out of the past three nights, my
daughter has helpfully woken up in the middle of the night and then fallen
back asleep at the magical hour of...6 in the morning.
Surely this is divine providence at work. =)
On another note, this is really the first time that I've been actively
participating in an olympic sport when the olympics rolled around,
and it kind of changes my perspective. I am probably never going to
go to a major international competition, let alone the olympics,
but even myself and my little club out here in the sticks are connected
to something much larger. It was astonishing to see
how many judoka were bearing their
national flags into the stadium during the opening ceremonies, and
how many different countries judoka were coming from.
Maybe I've always subconsciously thought of judo as something that
originated in Japan and spread around a bit to North America, Brazil,
and Western Europe. It was awesome to be disabused of that notion.
African nations fielded judoka. Russia and the former Soviet republics
are extremely strong competitors. Israel. Iran. Italy.
Cuba is a judo powerhouse. (Who knew?) Even tiny little nations like
Malta sent a number of very
tough judoka to Beijing. It's very cool to be reminded that I have
peers practicing the same sport as I in every corner of the world.