“I want creation to penetrate you with so much admiration that wherever you go, the least plant may bring you a clearer remembrance of the Creator—one blade of grass or speck of dust is enough to occupy your entire mind in beholding the art with which it has been made.”
-Saint Basil the Great
These writings are my still. Here, the superfluous evaporate, the memories
condense and clarify. This is the process
of accuracy acquired, chapters edited, experiences distilled. The dross is
being lifted. The lessons remain. Mountaineering has made the distillation
process clearer to me. Step onto the
snow and ask a mountaineer what his experience is like and he will mention the
wind, the cold, the stars and maybe even the fear, but if he is honest he will
also speak the word misery and how some large part of him wishes to be home
with his family. Ask him the next day
after he’s crossed from the snow to the sun-warmed rock, and his answer may
already have begun to change. He may speak
of a glory born from stars, of a pride born from fear, of a pleasure born from
discomfort. Sometimes, the world will
stand out sharper to him.
And other times not. Sometimes, he will leave the mountain and be
finished, set as firmly as the mountain itself in the peace of never returning. But either way, the lesson is clearer
afterwards. The experience continues to
happen, to ripen, becoming easier and easier to summarize and relate to
others. But the process needs to begin
somewhere, life must be distilled; so the problem at present is the present,
and this is my still.
I’m supposed to be moving out of my house even as I type this sentence. In place of sheets, my naked bed lays populated with lonely, misfit items. And the boxes stand outside my door, towering, stacked at attention. Books and boots—tools and tents—poles, clothing, and ropes— the boxes will swallow them all. Indeed, with the proper practicality of a bachelor, some items have never left the open mouths all year in anticipation of tomorrow when they will again slide into the truck, and I will take my place above them to sleep each night. I have been asked several times if I am dreading the exchange of a king sized bed for a truck bed, a house for a log cabin, privacy for constant community, but to the surprised questioners I have responded most quickly that I am not. There is nothing like a conclusion to help one appreciate a beginning, an impending change to help one appreciate sameness.
School is coming fast, and
with it civilization: traffic, housemates, computers and the like. When can I
even hope for an end to such civility?
When can I hope to sleep again in the dust or holed up in a vehicle like
a weasel in his den? It will not be long
until I am accustomed to falling asleep to traffic noises rather than crickets.
Dirtbagging in Yosemite |
I expect that some part of
me will continue to revel in, rather than despise the dust from which we were
made—to remember the experiences I’ve had and to be resilient against the cast
of culture. And I hope to be my own, walking
the cities and suburbs awake and wide-eyed with wonder, aware of the
omnipresent glory that lies thick on the world—not just on peaks and meadows,
forests and caves, but on people and cultures and cities. Eyesight like that is rare even among the
wise, even among the mystical and emotional.
Where it is most common, I guess, is among the thankful. I hope to stake my claim with them. If I can take these mountains, crickets, and
wildflowers with me, if I can remember and preserve the swifts whistling by my
head, the grass that falls upwards from El Capitan into the sky, the water
drops that hover like tiny galaxies in the updraft, if I can carry them
straight into the heart of the city and cup them in my hands as a flame, then maybe
I can give thanks for the opportunities I’ve been afforded, and maybe then I
can give thanks for the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead. I’m crossing from the snow to the sun-warmed
rocks.
El Cap |
A friend recently told me
that life, more so than any mountain, is the biggest adventure. I agree with him…and yet, there it is, I
already miss the dust.
Let's face it. This is in here just because it makes me look cool. |
It is already August. After five years of well-run courses for a
variety of families and students, I am finished working with Summit
Adventure. I move into my new house on
Sunday. On Monday morning I’ll start my
new job as the graduate assistant for Azusa Pacific University’s Outdoor
Adventure program, and I’ll be taking classes full time. I’m also hoping to ride the Whitney Classic
bike ride at the end of September. 135
miles. 15,300 ft of elevation gain. It’s a fundraiser, so you’ll probably get a
letter from me asking for donations.
As always, thanks for
reading. Sorry I haven’t been in contact
much this summer. Hopefully this entry
is a step in the right direction.
Ben