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She’s won 24 Paralympic medals. But Oksana Masters wants to talk about times she lost

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She’s won 24 Paralympic medals. But Oksana Masters wants to talk about times she lost

Oksana Masters poses with one of her gold medals in Italy. Out of her 24 total medals from both Summer and Winter Paralympics, 14 are gold.

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Multi-sport athlete Oksana Masters arrived in Milan Cortina as the most decorated U.S. Winter Paralympian in history, with 19 medals already under her belt from both summer and winter Games.

But a series of setbacks had her wondering if she would add to her collection — let alone make it to the start line in Italy.

Just two days before the opening ceremony, Masters announced on Instagram that she had been in and out of hospitals with a concussion and recurrent leg infection that kept her from training — not long after recovering from hand surgery for a torn ligament. She said she cried every day leading up to the Games, admitting, “I’m not the same skier as I was training to be.”

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But she didn’t give up.

“I might not be my best, but I will have the will to not give up and to keep fighting — for my village, for little Oksana — and do what I can do,” Masters said. “Because that’s what I’ve been doing my whole entire life.”

Masters, 36, was born in Ukraine with birth defects caused by radiation poisoning. She grew up shuffling between orphanages, enduring physical and emotional abuse, until she was adopted by an American single mom and moved to the U.S. at age 7.

She had each of her legs amputated when she was 9 and 14, and underwent multiple reconstructive surgeries on her hands. She got into adaptive rowing at age 13, falling in love with the sport because it gave her what she called “a new sense of freedom and control that was taken from me so many times throughout my past.”

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“I found out quickly the more I pushed myself, the stronger, faster and more in control I became,” Masters wrote on her website.

Masters pictured at rowing world cup event in 2012; she won her first Paralympic medal in the sport that year but had to pivot away from it due to injuries.

Masters pictured at a rowing world cup event in 2012; she won her first Paralympic medal in the sport that year but had to pivot due to injuries.

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A decade later, Masters and her rowing partner won bronze at her first Paralympics in 2012, when she was 23. And she’s competed in every Summer and Winter Games since, pivoting to cycling, cross-country skiing and biathlon after a back injury stopped her from rowing.

Masters said she knew her eighth Paralympics “would be a battle from start to finish,” and in some ways had already counted herself out. But she made it to the starting line of her first race, the 7.5 km sitting biathlon sprint, where she told herself her usual mantra: “I am strong.”

“I do doubt myself so much that it’s just the last thing I want to hear and believe … that I am strong and I’ve got this,” she told NPR.

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She won that race by 16 whole seconds. And she didn’t stop there.

Oksana Masters crosses the finish line in first place during the Women's 10km Para Cross-Country Skiing Sitting race in Italy.

Oksana Masters crosses the finish line in first place during the women’s 10km para cross-country skiing sitting race in Italy last week. She won five medals at the 2026 Paralympics, four of them gold.

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Masters leaves Italy with five new medals — four of them gold — bringing her overall total to 24 (she stores them in her sock drawer). Nineteen of those are from winter sports, extending her reign as the most decorated U.S. Winter Paralympian of all time. And she’s now the third most-decorated Paralympian in U.S. history.

“These medals, each of them are so different,” Masters told NPR in a video call on Saturday, the day before she won bronze in her final race of the Games. “They’ve had a different story for each one — to get to the start line, to earning them and fighting for them, so they all mean something special.”

But the losses have shaped her too 

Even as Masters celebrates her wins, she is quick to point out that she didn’t medal at two of her biathlon races at these Games. She finished in fourth and sixth place.

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She says she will remember that, just as she remembers failing to qualify for the Paralympics in 2008 and falling short of the podium in 2016.

“It took me my fourth Paralympic Games to get a gold medal,” she said, referring to her 2018 golds in cross-country skiing and biathlon. “I’m not the athlete that walked in and knew success right away.”

Masters was also part of the U.S. cross-country skiing mixed relay team that won gold for the second Winter Paralympics in a row.

Masters was also part of the U.S. cross-country skiing mixed relay team that won gold for the second Winter Paralympics in a row, alongside Joshua Sweeney, Sydney Peterson, Jake Adicoff and his guide Reid Goble.

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But she says not letting those failures define or stop her has become almost like a “secret weapon.” And that perseverance has clearly paid off.

Perhaps the best encapsulation of that is Masters’ second gold medal of these Games, in the women’s cross-country sprint race. She won that event in Pyeongchang in 2018 but placed second at Beijing in 2022 (despite a broken elbow), later calling it “the one that got away.”

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And she looked to be headed for silver again this time as she approached the final ascent of the race in second place — only to overcome a 131-foot gap, overtake the leader and power through ahead of the pack.

Oksana Masters reclaimed her 2018 title in the women's cross-country sprint, after finishing second in 2022.

Oksana Masters reclaimed her 2018 title in the women’s cross-country sprint, after finishing second in 2022.

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Masters raised her arms in triumph as she crossed the finish line and screamed with joy on the other side. She later described the win as “relief and redemption from Beijing.”

Speaking to NPR, Masters said she hopes others can similarly learn and grow from their own setbacks — and move at their own pace.

“Don’t compare your timeline to the person next to you or what someone’s achieved and whether you’ve achieved it or not,” Masters says. “Create those small goals within yourself, and just trust yourself.”

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What’s next for Masters 

Masters has a lot to celebrate. Beyond her medals, she’s looking forward to marrying her fiance Aaron Pike, a fellow dual-season U.S. Paralympian, in Italy (#Pikesana). It’s a fitting destination, since the two grew close — bonding over their love of coffee — at the 2014 Paralympics in Sochi.

Oksana Masters celebrates with her fiancé Aaron Pike.

Oksana Masters celebrates with her fiancé, Aaron Pike. This was the eighth Paralympics for both of them.

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“Our story began in snow, it started in the mountains,” Masters said. “And for us, we feel like that’d be a great way to start the next chapter in that journey and future together, in Italy in the mountains.”

And Masters is already thinking about her next Paralympics: Los Angeles 2028. She’ll pivot quickly to train for Para-cycling, and hopes to add to her four medals in the sport (the most recent two earned in Paris 2024).

“It’s a home Games for me, and it would be the most full-circle moment to line up on the start line,” Masters says, but it’s not her only goal for the next season. “I obviously want to stand on the podium on a home course, but I [also] want to help make the sport of cycling or, just in general, para sport better.”

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Masters co-founded the Sisters in Sports Foundation in 2020, which supports female athletes with disabilities through financial grants for training, travel and adaptive equipment, plus mental health resources and mentorship.

Masters pictured after winning of her two gold medals in Para-cycling at the 2024 Paralympics in Paris.

Masters pictured after winning one of her two gold medals in para-cycling at the 2024 Paralympics in Paris. She holds five summer medals and 19 winter medals.

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She has said she wishes she could have benefited from that kind of community and mentorship when she was younger, and is eager to be a resource for the next generation. The advice she gives them is largely the same as what she tells herself:

“Even with these gold medals, I’ll go into the next season doubting myself and not believing myself, because I’ve always kind of struggled with that as an athlete,” Masters says. “I think what I take away from this, going forward in the future and to LA and other endeavors of my life, [is] just to never count myself out. Just because you might not have the best approach and smooth process in the way you imagined doesn’t mean it’s determined right there and then, until you line up on the start line.”

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Thanks to ‘Mormon Wives,’ Dirty Soda Is a National Obsession

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Thanks to ‘Mormon Wives,’ Dirty Soda Is a National Obsession

The first time Pop’s Social, a catering company in South Orange, N.J., that specializes in dirty soda, served an alcoholic drink at an event, something strange happened.

At the event in December, its nonalcoholic offering, a spiced pear-cider seltzer with vanilla and peach syrups, cream, lemon and cold foam, was a hit. The Prosecco-spiked version? Not so much.

“People were more interested in the mocktail than the cocktail,” Ali Greenberg, an owner of the business, said in an interview.

Dirty soda — a customizable blend of soda, flavored syrup, creamer and sometimes fruit, served over pebble ice — has been crossing into the mainstream for years, especially after the cast of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives,” the hit reality show that premiered in 2024, frequented Swig, the Utah chain that started it all.

But its reach has gone far beyond the Mormon corridor, and its rise in popularity has dovetailed with an overall decline in U.S. alcohol consumption. “There’s not a lot of Mormon people in our neighborhood,” said Greenberg. “But there are a lot of people who are sober-curious or not drinking.”

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The reality show, which follows a group of Mormon influencers in Utah, helped popularize dirty soda beyond the Mountain States and inspired a wave of TikTok videos on the subject. Swig rapidly expanded — growing from 33 locations in Utah and Arizona in 2021 to now more than 150 locations in 16 states — along with other Utah chains, and spawned copycats nationwide.

Dirty soda has joined other Mormon cultural exports, like tradwife influencers, a “Real Housewives” franchise in Salt Lake City and Taylor Frankie Paul, the Bachelorette who wasn’t, that have captivated America.

With the recent rollouts of dirty soda at McDonald’s, Chick-fil-A and Dunkin’ — behold the Dunkin’ Dirty Soda: Pepsi, coffee milk and cold foam — and the appearance on grocery shelves of Dirty Mountain Dew and a coconut-lime Coffee Mate creamer for homemade dirty sodas, we may have reached peak dirty.

The idea for dirty soda came out of a desire for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which has millions of followers in Utah and surrounding states, to have more options for social drinking, as the church prohibits the consumption of alcohol, hot coffee and hot caffeinated tea.

When Swig introduced dirty soda in 2010, it filled a need, providing a pick-me-up for car-pooling moms and an after-school treat for their kids. It was quickly adopted by many in the community.

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“In other cultures, parents go, they pick up their coffee in the morning, and for me and for a lot of my other friends’ parents, it was, ‘Let’s go pick up our dirty soda,’” Whitney Leavitt, a breakout star of “Mormon Wives,” said in an interview.

Leavitt was surprised when her dirty soda order became a recurring question from reporters in recent years. “They were so excited to hear all of the different syrups and creamers that we add to our drinks to make whatever your go-to dirty soda is,” Leavitt said. (Hers is sparkling water with sugar-free pineapple, sugar-free peach and sugar-free vanilla syrups, raspberry purée, a squeeze of lime, and fresh mint if she’s “feeling really fancy.”)

In April, Leavitt became the chief creative and brand officer at Cool Sips, a beverage chain based in New York that sells dirty sodas.

“Mormon Wives” inspired Kaitlyn Sturm, a 26-year-old mother of three from Jackson, Miss., to post recipes for dirty sodas on her TikTok. The one she makes the most contains Coke or Dr Pepper, homemade cherry syrup, a glug of coconut creamer and a packet of True Lime crystallized lime powder, which she combines in a pasta-sauce jar filled with pebble ice. “It kind of has become like a ritual, where I make one for my husband as well, and we have it most evenings,” Sturm said in an interview.

The trend has also hit fast-food menus. The new “crafted soda” menu at McDonald’s is riddled with dirty soda DNA. The Dirty Dr Pepper, with vanilla flavoring and a cold-foam topper, is the chain’s version of what has shaped up to be the universal dirty soda flavor. Since 2024, Sonic, beloved for its porous, soda-absorbing pebble ice, has offered “dirty” drinks — your choice of soda plus coconut syrup, sweet cream and lime.

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These drinks might feel new, but there are antecedents in the Italian sodas of the ’90s (fizzy water and a pump of Torani syrup); the Shirley Temple (ginger ale or lemon-lime soda with grenadine and maraschino cherries); and the egg cream, a tonic of seltzer, chocolate syrup and milk. And what is a dirty Dr Pepper with cold foam if not a descendant of the root beer float? “It’s just a soda fountain from 125 years ago,” Kara Nielsen, a food and beverage trend forecaster, said in an interview.

Though Leavitt moved to New York City with her family in December, her dirty soda ritual has remained consistent, with one key difference. “In Utah, we don’t get to walk to dirty soda shops,” Leavitt said. “We have to drive there.”

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Chaos Gardening: A Laid-Back Way to Garden

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Chaos Gardening: A Laid-Back Way to Garden

Annuals include flowers like marigolds and nasturtiums. They grow fast but won’t come back the next spring (though they will drop seeds and possibly propagate). Perennials like lavender and sage will return year after year, but they may take longer to grow. Wildflower and pollinator packets often contain both annual and perennial seeds but are frowned upon by some serious gardeners, because the selection can be haphazard and ill-suited to the area.

It’s a good idea to exercise a little situational awareness. How much rain can you expect? How much sunlight? Dig the earth and feel it between your fingers — is it sandy? Loamy? These are things to keep in mind as you prepare for your journey into horticultural chaos.

“You want to prepare your soil, your site, at least a little bit,” said Deryn Davidson, a sustainable landscape expert at Colorado State University Extension in Longmont, Colo. “Try to get rid of weeds. Make sure the soil is ready to receive seeds.”

Davidson, who has written about chaos gardening, strongly advised covering the seeds with a layer of soil, lest they become bird food. As for watering, that depends on where you live, she added. On the whole, though, the formula is straightforward: “Soil, sun and water is what these seeds need,” Davidson said.

Not everyone is a fan of the trend, or at least the way it has been portrayed on social media. “Nature is not chaos — nature is pattern,” said Robin Wall Kimmerer, a botanist and the author of “Braiding Sweetgrass,” which recommends imbuing modern life with Indigenous wisdom.

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“It seems unrealistic,” Kimmerer said of the chaos gardening videos she has watched. The feeling of effortlessness they convey — a common social media effect, almost always the result of deft editing — seems to elide the work that goes into a garden, whether chaotic or not, she suggested.

“I want my garden to be natural and biodiverse,” she said. “That’s a good impulse. I don’t think this technique is going to get you there, but that’s an important impulse.”

Boitnott, the maker of the viral video, offered a simple reason for why chaos gardening has become popular: “It just makes you happy.”

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What is an eye massage? We tried it at this under-the-radar L.A. spot

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What is an eye massage? We tried it at this under-the-radar L.A. spot

Admission: I suffer from eyestrain. Even right this very second. As a reporter working on a computer more than eight hours most days, my eyes often feel fatigued and itchy by evening.

I’m not alone: More than half of the U.S. population lives with computer vision syndrome, also known as digital eyestrain, and nearly 16.4 million Americans suffer from dry eye syndrome. So I was especially excited to stumble on New Vogue Spa, in the City of Industry, which offers a relaxing, if intriguing, treatment called “Eyeball Care” — something I’d never heard of before at a day spa.

New Vogue Spa is an Asian-style spa with Korean and Chinese influences. The spa’s offerings include massages and body scrubs — I was curious about the “Red Wine Body Scrub” — but I couldn’t help exploring eyeball care, which was much needed after my 50-minute drive from Silver Lake. (The City of Industry is about 30 minutes from downtown L.A. without heavy traffic.)

So it came to be that I found myself lying on a massage table, wearing what looked like protruding diving goggles, with clouds of cool, aromatic steam oozing from both sides of it and engulfing my face. A spindly plastic tube extended from my forehead to the “Eye Spa” machine. Serene spa music, a blend of classical piano and loudly chirping birds, trilled in the background as the machine sloshed and gurgled. It felt like lying, creekside, in a spa robe wrapped in a blanket of chamomile and rosemary-scented fog.

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As my esthetician, Jenny Chen, adjusted the eye mask and added essential oils to the mist, New Vogue manager Lesley Xie explained that the 60-minute, $125 Eyeball Care treatment aims to hydrate and stimulate blood circulation in the eye area, decrease puffiness and dark circles and aid eye fatigue and dry eye syndrome.

“It’s really helpful for overall eye health for people who are on computers for a long time or sleep really late or who are reading a lot,” she said.

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The Eyeball Care treatment included a mask filled with cool, aromatic steam to help relieve fatigued eyes.

2 Slippers in the Himalayan Salt Room.

1. The Eyeball Care treatment included a mask filled with cool, aromatic steam to help relieve fatigued eyes. 2. Slippers in the Himalayan Salt Room.

Xie said that eyeball care treatments are common in China. When she was growing up in Guangdong in Southern China, elementary school students were given a break every afternoon to perform “eye exercises,” which involved gently massaging pressure points around their eye areas, for 5-10 minutes.

“It released eye stress because we studied from eight o’clock in the morning until almost noon time,” she said. “It was a break for our eyes to prevent nearsightedness and tired eyes.”

New Vogue Spa’s treatment was supremely relaxing from the onset — part Head Spa, part facial, part eye care. Chen began by massaging my scalp for about 10 minutes, as I tried not to fall asleep.

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Next she cleaned my face, applied massage cream and gently massaged my face and eye area, manipulating the outer corners of my eye sockets as well as under my brow bones and on my temples. She was precise and firm but careful — as she pressed on the outside corner of my eye, I felt tension draining down the side of my cheek and neck.

Esthetician Jenny Chen conducts “Golden Eye therapy” on reporter Deborah Vankin.

Esthetician Jenny Chen conducts “Golden Eye therapy” on reporter Deborah Vankin.

Xie said the massage is based on traditional Chinese medicine, focusing on stimulating acupressure points around the eyes.

“Gentle massage of these areas is believed to help promote blood circulation, relax the muscles responsible for focusing and relieve visual fatigue,” she said. “While it’s not a medical treatment for vision conditions, it’s widely used as a preventative and restorative method.”

The massage was followed by “Golden Eye therapy,” during which Chen used an electronic device on my face with a metal roller ball on it. It uses “ultrasonic vibration technology,” Xie said, to help the skin absorb the applied moisturizing cream and combat eye puffiness.

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The main event was the “cooling steam therapy,” which Xie said was meant to be calming and refreshing and help relieve tired eyes. Chen fitted me with what looked like an enormous diving mask that quickly filled with cool, hydrating mist — I felt droplets of water dripping from my eyes and down my cheeks. The Eye Spa machine uses a “cold mist atomization process,” Xie said, “that disperses micro-particles of moisture combined with soothing essential oils.”

At the end of my treatment, Chen gave me under-eye gel pad masks, for added hydration, while conducting one last head massage. She applied moisturizing eye cream, face cream and sunscreen before sending me off.

Dr. Kristina Voss, an ophthalmologist with Keck Medicine of USC, was enthusiastic about the Eyeball Care treatment.

“It sounds wonderful. Anything that makes you feel good, I generally support,” she said. “It sounds safe because they’re not putting pressure on the eye. Direct pressure on the eyeball [is dangerous]. And I’d be nervous if they were putting something in the eye, but they’re not. Steam, or even cool condensation from a humidifier, is effective for dry eye. Massaging pressure points probably doesn’t treat dry eye, but could potentially treat eyestrain or tension headaches that can be interpreted as eyestrain.”

Los Angeles Times features writer Deborah Vankin inspects her eyeballs after her treatment.

Los Angeles Times features writer Deborah Vankin inspects her eyeballs after her treatment.

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Temporary relief aside, however, Voss warned that the treatment is not a replacement for seeing a doctor if a condition is ongoing.

“It’s relaxing and complementary to a doctor’s dry eye treatments — like medicated drops or in-office treatments — but it’s not a simple fix or cure all,” she said. “Ongoing doctor’s care would be important.”

After my treatment, I was invited to linger in the co-ed Himalayan Salt Room and Red Clay Room or woman-only spa area, complete with a warm soaking tub, lounge area and treatment rooms for body scrubs. (I skipped the adjacent New Vogue MedSpa, where you can get botox, dermal filler or microneedling treatments.)

Guests are also treated to a cup of homemade snow fungus tea (made from tremella mushrooms) with a single jujube, or red, date, floating inside. New Vogue makes a fresh batch every morning for guests, simmering the collagen-rich drink so long it becomes somewhat gelatinous.

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The Himalayan Salt Room.

2 The co-ed lounge area.

3 The Red Clay Room.

1. The Himalayan Salt Room. 2. The co-ed lounge area. 3. The Red Clay Room.

“Snow fungus focuses on deep hydration and skin plumping, while red dates support circulation and a healthy glow,” Xie said, calling the concoction “a warm bowl of snow fungus and red date soup.”

I can’t speak to the medicinal benefits of snow fungus tea. But after a glass of the warm, woody-tasting drink — together with the hour-long tension-taming eye treatment — I saw the world in a whole new way while walking out the door: clearly, from a relaxed perspective and with the bigger picture in focus.

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