Consensus on television game show: 50 years of age is the
point at which men “let themselves go,” physically speaking.
I have signed up for two ski races this season. Goals.
By ski races I mean cross country ski races. I gave up downhill racing a few years ago after
getting progressively slower over three seasons. And by progressively
slower I mean that in my last season I racked up more DNFs than completed
runs. The DNFs included some pretty
dramatic crashes.
I haven’t participated (“raced” would be an exaggeration) in
five years. The reasons for this being,
in no order: race called off because of lack of snow, death of son, rescued by
helicopter out of the mountains, heart surgery, shoulder surgery, self-pity.
“Do not go gentle in that good night.” I didn’t need Dylan Thomas to tell me that.
Thomas died the year I was born. His last words were “I’ve had 18 straight
whiskies. That’s a record.” However, he didn’t die of alcohol poisoning,
but a host of other maladies, mostly self-induced. I don’t know if he went gently or not, but he
went early. He was 39.
There is absolutely no research to support the commonplace
notion that men think about sex once every seven seconds. But say it is true. If it were ever true for me there was a kind
of tipping point: now I think about death once every seven seconds.
In 2015 my friend Charlie Sassara and I climbed Peak 11,300
in the Alaska Range. “How fast did you
go?” someone asked. “As slow as we
possibly could,” Charlie said.
Ueli Steck, the Swiss
Machine, climbed the north face of the Eiger in less than three hours. I would imagine he maybe could have done 11,300
in about the same time.
We turned back due to high winds the other day before we got
to the summit of Flattop. I hike with
three guys who are more fit than I am, younger,
too, I add now in self-defense. So
they are above me when they turn around and pick me up, so to speak, on the
descent. And I am always glad to
“retreat.” And I wonder: will there ever
again be a time when the others want to fold and it’s me who wants to continue pushing
upward? Or have I passed a tipping point there?
According to an Institute of Medicine
report, a good death is: "Free from
avoidable distress and suffering for patient, family and caregivers, in general
accord with the patient's and family's wishes, and reasonably consistent with
clinical, cultural and ethical standards."
Before his record on the north face of the Eiger he had
climbed the route around 40 times. Ueli
Steck died soloing on Nuptse. He was 40
years old.
My best estimate is that I have climbed (walked up) Flattop
around 200 times in the last decade.
I had the cornice dream again last night. In this one I am skiing close the edge of a
summit ridge and the cornice begins to crack and slowly give way. As I am falling I believe I am going to
survive, that the snow will somehow cushion the landing. I know there is a shelf that will catch me
150 feet below. For some reason this
seems completely survivable. I awaken
before I find out whether the dream-me survives or not. In the light of day, of course, one would not
survive this scenario. But in the dream world, I was certain I would.
“For when you gaze long into the abyss. The abyss gazes also into you.”
So Nietzsche famously said. I have been guilty
of the naivety of taking Nietzsche (and others) literally. That is: I have gazed into many literal
abysses. In the mountains. What has been
on my mind foremost in those moments was a note to self: "Don’t fuck up
here.”
Peter Habeler climbed the north face of the Eiger at the age
of 74.
We had made two or three good climbs, depending how you
count, the highlight possibly being chased off Mt Temple by an enormous
grizzly. We were having breakfast at the
little restaurant in the Alpine Club of Canada’s hostel at Lake Louise. The room had a stone fireplace and was decorated
with antiquated climbing equipment.
Among which we recognized the gear we first used on our first Canadian
Rockies excursion, 1973.
I had kidney stones that would not pass and they put me in
the hospital to manage the pain. The
pain would not be managed. Ironically,
when I had life-threatening cancers there was hardly any pain at all. Anyway, they had me on an i.v. morphine drip
which I could self-administer (up to a point, of course). I maxed out quickly. I was curled up in the fetal position and I
remember there was a television up in the corner of the room. It was turned off and in the screen I could
see my colorless reflection: a shrunken man curled up in pain in a white
hospital gown. I remember thinking, so there’s
Nietzsche’s abyss. I remember thinking, “So this is how it ends.”
But Habeler had also set a speed record on the north face in
the 70s with Reinhold Messner. With whom
he was also the first to ascend Everest without the use of bottled oxygen.
Cancer wore my dad out at 82. Nonetheless his last words were reported to
be “get me up, goddamnit.”
Fred Beckey made over a thousand first ascents, mostly in
North America. The first time I met him
was in the mid-70s. He came by Early
Winters in Seattle trolling for prospective partners. He would climb with
anybody, but not everybody enjoyed climbing with him.
As late as his early nineties Beckey was still trying to do
hard climbs with the aid of younger, well-meaning climbers. He had a tick-list of four routes he was desperate
to accomplish, any one of which would
kick anyone’s ass. He was unable
to get further than to the base of them, which was a considerable achievement.
I’ve climbed Beckey routes all over the west. In 2014 we tried to climb the famous West
Ridge of Mt. Forbidden in the North Cascades, a route Beckey first put up in 1940. We were super slow on the approach and
exhausted when we arrived at the high camp.
We discovered the glacier had all but melted out leaving a dangerous gauntlet
of tottering seracs and an exposing an additional several hundred feet of rock
climbing where there had once been snow.
We abandoned the climb.
The last time I saw Beckey he was bound to a
wheelchair. He would pass away later
that year at home, in the arms of beloved friend. He was 94.
I have a tick list of climbs I still want to do. The north face of the Eiger hovers just off
it. I am superstitious about revealing
what is really on the list in the same way I am superstitious about talking
away the potential magic of a writing project not yet completed.
I turn 66 this year.
Six more centuries and I become a beast.
Mountaineering history is filled with many haunting
deaths. On Nobukazu Kuriki’s fourth
Everest attempt frostbite took nine of his fingers to the middle joint. He was 36 years old last year when he
perished on his ninth attempt, solo. His
final You Tube message: “I hope to keep climbing with you in spirit.”
The Tour of Anchorage is nine days out. We have enough snow.
The ten-day weather forecast is good. My training has been . . .
consistent.
In the cornice dream I am not panicked, or even
stressed. I know I am going to
survive. I think, even, that I will live
forever.
•
Photo: North Face of the Eiger from the side, 2007
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