You won't believe what this UBC captain did
Okay, so I’m watching the news cycle, and there’s the usual — mudslides in Coquitlam, the never-ending conversation about the Canucks’ *ikigai*, or lack thereof. But then, this one story about the UBC women’s hockey captain, Chanreet Bassi, just floats to the top like a perfectly ripe avocado. She had a medical school interview, right? The most important interview of her life, probably. And it was scheduled *on the same day* as the national championship quarterfinal. Most people would pick one. Not Bassi. She took the interview, still in her hockey gear, in her hotel room, then somehow — *somehow* — got a ride to the rink with her parents to make the third period. They say she arrived with about 12 minutes left in the game. That’s not just dedication; that’s a whole other level of Vancouver hustle.
### What This Means for Vancouver
It's the kind of story that reminds you what it actually means to thrive here, in a city that demands so much. You've got the academic pressure cooker of Point Grey, the intense athletic expectations of a national championship, and the sheer logistical nightmare of getting anywhere quickly across the city, even with a police escort—which, for the record, she didn't have.
* This isn't just about hockey; it's about the kind of drive you see everywhere here, from the Granville Island vendors at 5 AM to the folks grinding it out on the seawall before sunrise.
* It speaks to the unique blend of ambition and grit that defines a certain type of Vancouverite. It’s a quiet determination, like the rain itself—constant, unrelenting, and ultimately, deeply shaping.
It's a reminder that even as we talk about the big, systemic issues, there are these individual moments of almost absurd commitment playing out. It's beautiful out here. Complicated in here. That's the coast.
Mornings.live has the early takes on all this and more. You should check it out.