UAE Portrait of a Nation: The steely Al Ain nurse taking the ironman world in her stride

Nurse Sylvia George is inspired to compete by the little fighters in Al Ain Hospital's neonatal unit

Dubai, United Arab Emirates - July 23, 2019: Sylvia George has been a nurse for 12 years and has qualified for the World Ironman championships in Nice. Tuesday the 23rd of July 2019. Al Ain Golf and equestrian club, Al Ain. Chris Whiteoak / The National
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The Bio

Favourite Emirati dish: I have so many because it has a lot of herbs and vegetables. Harees  (oats with chicken) is one of them

Favourite place to go to: Dubai Mall because it has lots of sports shops.

Her motivation: My performance because I know that whatever I do, if I put the effort in, I’ll get results

During her free time: I like to drink coffee - a latte no sugar and no flavours. I do not like cold drinks

Pet peeve: That with every meal they give you a fries and Pepsi. That is so unhealthy

Advice to anyone who wants to be an ironman: Go for the goal. If you are consistent, you will get there. With the first one, it might not be what they want but they should start and just do it

Al Ain nurse-turned-athlete Sylvia George is a woman with a kind heart and an iron will.

When she is not tending to patients, she runs, rides a bike or hits the water in preparation for her next ironman competition.

For the mother of two, nursing is her calling and sport her essential stress reliever.

When in the heat of competition, her unyielding dedication to her profession proves an inspiration to push her over the finish line when her bones ache and her mind tires.

Now 48, she has her sights set on success in the Ironman 70.3 World Championships in France next month, where she must complete a gruelling triple-header comprised of a swim, bicycle ride and run.

It is a road well travelled for Ms George, who has completed a full ironman race and eight half ironmans – an achievement made all the more remarkable by the fact she learnt to swim only when she was 42.

"Sport is my stress reliever and means everything to me," Ms George says.

She juggles a full-time job managing a neonatal intensive care unit, where she cares for ill and premature babies, with home-schooling a 14-year-old son, but somehow still finds time to train six times a week.

“At some of my races, sometimes when I struggle, I think of all these babies who come in small and sick and leave with big smiles,” she says.

Dubai, United Arab Emirates - July 23, 2019: Sylvia George has been a nurse for 12 years and has qualified for the World Ironman championships in Nice. Tuesday the 23rd of July 2019. Al Ain Golf and equestrian club, Al Ain. Chris Whiteoak / The National
Sylvia George will  be pushing herself to the limit at the World Ironman championship event in Nice, France, this September. Al Ain. Chris Whiteoak / The National

“We see them after a year and how they survive. For me, if they can fight like this then I can do anything.” Ms George wakes up at 4am every day and goes for a run before starting her work shift, which ends at 4pm.

She then swims or cycles after work.

Her son joins her in many of her races, while her husband has also taken part in triathlons.

“This is bonding time for us and how we spend quality time. We cycle together, run together and compete together,” she says.

“One day, I saw a 60-year-old couple participating and I thought, I am a nurse, I should be an example.”

In her first race, she swam with a life jacket because she had not yet mastered swimming, "but I was determined", she says. She completed her first triathlon in 2013, swimming in the sea off Abu Dhabi and cycling along the Corniche past the Marina and back.

Dubai, United Arab Emirates - July 23, 2019: Sylvia George has been a nurse for 12 years and has qualified for the World Ironman championships in Nice. Tuesday the 23rd of July 2019. Al Ain Golf and equestrian club, Al Ain. Chris Whiteoak / The National
Sylvia George is inspired to reach the finishing line by the fighting spirit of the young patients she cares for. Chris Whiteoak / The National

"I didn't come first or second. I was one of the last but I finished the race," she said.

It has been a long journey for Ms George.

In 2002, she left a husband and two-year-old daughter behind in South Africa and came to the UAE because she was curious.

She was mystified and intrigued by exotic images of Bedouins riding camels across towering sand dunes.

“It was more curiosity. I didn’t know what to expect,” she says. “The plan was to come for one year.

"I told my husband that I liked what I saw. I liked the difference. 

"When I came here, I was a bit disappointed because it was not the desert I expected.

"I was expecting desert and women covered in burqas.

“I saw that this was totally the opposite and nothing like I thought it was.

Dubai, United Arab Emirates - July 23, 2019: Sylvia George has been a nurse for 12 years and has qualified for the World Ironman championships in Nice. Tuesday the 23rd of July 2019. Al Ain Golf and equestrian club, Al Ain. Chris Whiteoak / The National
The dedicated nurse divides her family, her profession and her passion for sporting competition. Chris Whiteoak / The National

“I read a lot and in many books it said that we had to cover up, we weren’t allowed to go out without a male, that I wasn’t allowed to drive and when I came it was totally the opposite.

“Nobody asked me to wear a shayla or abaya or not to go out or anything.”

The shayla she bought remains untouched.

About three years after she came to the UAE, her husband joined her.

“He could see that I loved it here, I was safe. I enjoyed my job, the people.”

Her first patient turned 17 this year. “I think they are also why I stayed,” she says.

“My patients and the families. People here are different and nothing like I expected.

"When I came, I thought ... I should be scared of them and should not talk to them.

“Then I discovered that was not true. They are friendly, honest, and open and have good hearts.

“It was just different, and I loved it.”

The Bio

Favourite Emirati dish: I have so many because it has a lot of herbs and vegetables. Harees  (oats with chicken) is one of them

Favourite place to go to: Dubai Mall because it has lots of sports shops.

Her motivation: My performance because I know that whatever I do, if I put the effort in, I’ll get results

During her free time: I like to drink coffee - a latte no sugar and no flavours. I do not like cold drinks

Pet peeve: That with every meal they give you a fries and Pepsi. That is so unhealthy

Advice to anyone who wants to be an ironman: Go for the goal. If you are consistent, you will get there. With the first one, it might not be what they want but they should start and just do it