NORDER WORKS SO hard that her body fights back. Rowing has rejected her, because the harder she works, the more damage she does.
Ankle surgery, a fractured rib, and a broken toe that never healed. “The broken toe, that was not a big deal,” she said. “My freshman year, my foot exploded one morning. That sounds completely weird. Even if you talk to doctors they have no idea what happened or why, but my foot just swelled to three times its size.”
Her effort and passion are her greatest gifts and her greatest enemies. She's injured herself in one instance midrace and soldiered on, continuing for another two weeks through the NCAA Championships, despite an injury that offered no relief.
Last June, Norder earned her degree in management science and engineering and now is co-terming on a master’s in communication. For the past two years, Norder was an undergraduate housing coordinator, one of two students who matched roommates for first-year students for Stanford Residential & Dining Enterprises.
Norder spent much of the summers learning everything she could about Stanford’s more than 1,700 first-year students and pairing them in their dorms.
For Norder, it was an interesting observation into the imagination. Students developed conspiracy theories on why certain people were paired with others. How, indeed, could four men with names like John, James, Jacob and Joshua -- a “biblical quadrangle” -- be matched together in Roble Hall? Some theories were based on information the housing coordinators didn’t even have.
“People would come up with crazy ideas,“ Norder said.
With her two-year obligation behind her, Norder entered this academic year with fewer distractions and more opportunity to focus on rowing for her fifth and final season.
However, instead of feeling revitalized, she felt sluggish and tired, all the time. At a big early season race, the Head of the Charles in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 21, she was part of the Cardinal's varsity eight that placed second in the Women's Championship Eights, first among collegiate crews, and even beat one of the national-team boats.
“We were riding a high, but I was exhausted,” Norder said. “We were supposed to do a hard workout the next week and I was in tears. I came to Derek’s office and told him, ‘I’m so tired. I slept 14 hours yesterday and I don’t know what’s wrong.’”
By Thanksgiving, Norder was having heart palpitations. Later were fainting spells. She passed out so often that she taught herself how to fall, by moving away from countertops and tables and lowering her body slowly to the ground.
“I was falsely confident that I was OK, because I felt I could control it,” Norder said. “I was more worried that by passing out, I would traumatize the people around me. Waking up is a little startling, but it’s not really that bad. But for the people around you, that’s really traumatic. Especially if it’s your coach or your teammates.”
Even when resting, her heart rate soared to as high as 250 beats a minute. And still she thought the problem was in her head.
As her heart raced one night, she took a video of her heart rate monitor and showed it to her brother, who is in medical school. He urged her to seek help.
With an injury, Norder drew comfort in knowing it wouldn’t kill her. She’d continue to train through it if she could. But this was different. If she passed out on the boat, she was afraid her coaches would be afraid to put her back on the water. What if she collapsed into the water?
She arrived at the office alone, convinced it probably was nothing. Instead, an electrophysiologist diagnosed atrial flutter, an abnormal heart rhythm that starts in the atrial chambers of the heart. It’s common with the elderly, but rare for someone so young. This time, she was scared.
She could take medications for the rest of her life to control her heart rate and blood pressure. But maintaining a low heart-rate would end her rowing career, where the point of training is to redline your heart, not coddle it.
Norder elected surgery. Cardiac ablation. They would thread catheters – five in her case – through blood vessels from her groin into her heart and map electrical signals in the heart that were misfiring, by burning them. The scarring would prevent the electricity to create bad signals.
“How long is it going to take to get me back?” she asked.
Devin was awake during the January surgery, at least until the burning caused too much pain. The doctors put her under, though she remembers little of that.
For two days, Norder remained in discomfort while her heart remained irritated, causing chest pain. Eventually it subsided, and Norder began to ease back as best she could. Rowing just didn’t feel right at first, especially with her heart still experiencing irritation.
“Maxing out doing a 2-kilometer race is one of most irritating things you can do to your heart already,” she said. “And my heart was slightly swollen, with some scar tissue.”
After three months, Norder was given the green light for full training. The Pac-12 and NCAA championships were ahead and Norder was determined to make it into those boats. This, after all, is her last shot.