A childhood working nights on her dad’s commercial fishing boat, bringing in the catch until dawn. The early days playing box lacrosse, an indoor version of the sport, with the boys because there was no team for girls on the island. Making a ten-hour commute, including the ferry ride back and forth from the mainland, when her family moved further up the coast to Campbell River.
That journey would pale in comparison to the more than 2,000-mile trek Lasota made from British Columbia to Evanston where she began her lacrosse career at Northwestern. She felt the distance in more than just geography.
“I would write these papers about indigenous issues like the impact of colonization and colonialism and a lot of my professors - even at a great school like Northwestern - had never heard of anything like that,” Lasota said. “It was a massive change.”
It’s important context, not just to understand Lasota’s career with the Nuu-chah-nulth, but to appreciate how a teenager thousands of miles from home showed up at Northwestern in 2015, started scoring goals and just never stopped.
“I grew up watching all of these superstar Northwestern players,” Lasota said. “I came here as an 18-year-old and suddenly I’m playing at the same school as Hannah Nielsen, Taylor Thornton and Alyssa Leonard. They were the best of the best.”
The day before Scane and the Wildcats took down Loyola Maryland to clinch their spot in this weekend’s Final Four, Lasota woke up early with a boat to catch.
She was traveling to the indigenous community of Ahousaht, and Lasota would need to travel 45 minutes by water taxi in order to start her workday.
“Ahousaht First Nation are one of the only indigenous communities with their own education authority, so that’s a really cool dynamic to be a part of,” she said. “I check in with the adults at the school and poke my head into classes so I can consistently expose myself to the youth. A huge thing with my practice is building consistency in relationships.”
Lasota’s work is also grounded in the history of these indigenous communities, something she’s been conscious of throughout her career. In 2021, Lasota withdrew from the Canadian national team after the discovery of 215 unmarked graves belonging to Indigenous children at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia.
In a statement announcing her decision, she called on the Canadian government to “acknowledge the past,” and that she would join the Haudenosaunee national team, which represents the Iroquois Confederacy, for future international competitions.
Her perspective hasn’t changed in the classroom.
“In most indigenous communities, there’s this concept of white saviorism when a non-community member wants to help, comes into the community and realizes how much grief, loss and trauma is in the community and eventually gets burnt out,” she said. “So, consistency is a huge thing for me. Having my own spiritual connection to this community is really important.”
With the Nuu-chah-nulth, Lasota is doing the same thing she did better than anyone else in the history of Northwestern Women’s Lacrosse – keep showing up, every day.
And while the Final Four won’t be televised in Canada this weekend, Lasota will be following along as the Wildcats chase their first national championship since 2012.
After all, she impacted one player on the field in North Carolina this weekend more than most.
“To be on the field with the girls, especially Selena, that I watched growing up was amazing,” Scane said. “Even though I was a young player, I had her support to play how I wanted to play.”