CESANA, Italy — Two things happened to Vonetta Flowers after the 2002 Olympics — one expected, and one a total surprise.
Even before the Salt Lake Games, when Flowers pushed her bobsled — and herself — into history, becoming the first-ever black gold-medalist at a Winter Olympics, she decided that she wanted to start a family once the Games were over. Sure enough, she was pregnant with twins a week after closing ceremonies.
Yet the cravings that she had in the following months were not for pickles and peanut butter, but for push times and knuckle-numbing speed. Today, the former sprinter from Alabama is again at the Olympics, looking to medal in the sport she once likened to being thrown down a mountain in a trash can.
Even now, Flowers thanks God for "every good curve" — and there have been many twists in her life, both on the track and off.
There has been the premature birth of sons Jaden and Jorden, so small their hospital wristbands fit around her finger. There is the life lived every winter on the World Cup circuit — always with her husband and sons, often without sleep. And there is the hope that Jorden, who was born deaf, will one day be able to talk.
Yet as always, Flowers sees only blessings for what bobsled — and the past four years — have brought. And today's event is about sharing with her new family what she shared with the world in Salt Lake.
"It was an amazing feeling . . . but I think I can have it again, because this time I can share it with my kids," she says. "I want to do well for my family."
Asked what comes to mind when thinking about Flowers, the driver of her two-woman sled, Jean Prahm, responds: "She has a very good heart."
But when thinking about her as a teammate, a very different Flowers leaps forward: "She's a competitor," Prahm says.
During the past four years, Flowers has needed both qualities in abundance. Jaden and Jorden were born three months early. Both needed to stay in the hospital for more than six weeks.
But since they were 5 months old, they've been to every World Cup event with her. "My husband (Johnny) and I do it," says Flowers. "We don't have a nanny."
Sometimes, they sit in the car and watch "Cool Runnings" — the movie about the Jamaican bobsled team — while Mom hurtles down the track. Other times the top of the track becomes a makeshift kindergarten. "One will sit in a box, and the other will push him around," says Flowers.
In December, a doctor in Italy — where Flowers brings her family every winter on the bobsled tour — operated on Jorden, waiving his fee for the procedure. Other expenses, including the cost of the device that lets Jorden hear, were covered by a donation from insurance company Allianz, a bobsled tour sponsor.
"This is all part of God's plan," she says. "It might be one reason I was put in the sport."
Jorden can now hear, and instead of merely mouthing words, he is trying to speak. "He's such a cute boy and so full of life; he's just ready to start talking," says Prahm.
For the first time since they were born, though, the twins are not here with Flowers.
For a woman who still cries when talking about her gold medal, being away from her sons for the first time is tougher than any push time. But she and Johnny decided that the Olympics were too hectic to bring them.
Perhaps she'll have another chance in Vancouver. She hasn't ruled out coming back in 2012 as a driver. Right now as a push athlete, she laughs, "My job is about five seconds." If she does come back, she could add to her sled a single bumper sticker: "God is my co-pilot."
