Tuesday, December 25, 2018

On the Mountain: Day 3

At this point, there is no turning back.  Not in my mind anyway. Some say this is not healthy thinking.  It may or may not be but I made a commitment. I was pretty much at the end of the rope.  Which is pretty bad because as I have come to find out, I don’t use ropes. Something had to change.  The words to the song, Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd put it best.
 
We’re just two lost souls
Swimming in a Fishbowl
Year after year
Running over the same old ground
Of how we found
The same old fears. . .

I had said yes.  We say lots of words in our lives, have lots of conversations, say many things, many phrases.  It may be that 99.999999% of the words we say have no impact on our lives or anyone else’s for that matter but this one word spoken at that time over the phone was like a 90 degree turn taken at 90 miles an hour.  There was sure to be a wreck.

I am not sure of the exact words that I thought after I had said yes but I do know the feeling was one best expressed by the phrase, “Holy Shit” along with a sudden loss of breath.  I didn’t see it this way then but my boots were on the ground and I had shut the car door. The mountain in front of me however was obscured by a heavy fog. Although I knew I had a pretty good hike ahead of me, it never occurred to me that there was a mountain behind all that fog.

I remember my ex-wife saying, “I can’t believe you think this is a good idea.”  as I was looking up ads on “roommates.com” Our marriage was falling apart and for good reason.  I certainly own at least half of it. But I have to be careful. Although I would like to take on the full blame, it is clear to me now that this is not true.  I am not sure how much of this I will go into in this book. It would probably be best if I just poured it all out for you to see.

I certainly was a bad actor in the marriage.  I know my part in it. I know it well. In fact, it is difficult for me to see what part she had in it.  This actually, to this day, fuels a bit of a resentment: “She is perfect.” is the basic premise behind this resentment.  In my mind the perception is, is that she is perfect. I actually believe she believes this. This of course is unhealthy thinking.  But I will continue. After all, this is my perception and I am fully aware that my perceptions don’t alway jibe with reality.

So, here goes an abbreviated version of the resentment: She is not afflicted with cravings of any kind. She does not drink to excess.  She eats only lettuce although sometimes she will allow herself to have a peanut. Her desires for sex are controlled as if she has some type of button that turns them on at a time of her choosing.  Otherwise she has no interest and thinks of sex as something that people who live in trailer parks do. She lives in a life of constant productivity. It occurs to me that if she could, she would devise a way of being productive during sleep.  I am not talking about having dreams that would help her out psychologically. I am talking about real stuff. If she could have lucid dreams where her body could be moving and doing stuff like building a house she would do this. She regards sitting and reading, writing, doing art, listening to music as unholy wastes of time.  Self introspection is frivolous and for the weak. There is no need for self introspection when you are perfect.

Please understand that this is my perception which is pretty much a caricature of who she is.  It is an exaggeration. I do know that there is an element of truth no matter how small or subtle behind every claim.

Forget about her though, this resentment should tell you volumes about me though.  It should tell you why we are no longer married. Seriously, do I have to spell it out?  Okay, I will but not quite yet. I am hoping it is apparent that the resentment with my ex-wife is indicative of many things I have going on with me.  Which is the most important part of this book, me. Herein lies the problem. Me.

There are many paradoxes in life.  This is one of them. Our marriage fell apart the moment our eyes first met because I was and was not or rather am and am not the most important person in the world - in case you were wondering.  I was and can still be self centered in the extreme while completely disregarding myself. When you put these two things together the result is a shit show that makes the New York City septic system look like a well maintained porta-potty.

The problem wasn’t her, my job, my dad, my mom, my sister, the republicans or the democrats, the christians, the jews, the muslims, Osama bin Laden, George Bush, Bill Clinton, the Russians, the Canadians, global warming, the patriarchy, the industrial military establishment, chem trails, or even the illuminati.  The problem is me. On that day, after the the “s” in yes left my lips, went into the microphone, traveled through the spaghetti network of wires and cables, over the airwaves out the speaker of the recruiter’s phone and finally into his ear I stood there staring into the fog getting ready to take the first step on a mountain climb that appears to be taking up the remainder of my life.  The mountain I had to climb and am still climbing is me.

On some of the difficult peaks in Colorado and maybe with every mountain there is a passage called “the crux”  You may have heard, “The crux of the problem is . . . “ When I started climbing/hiking the mountains in Colorado, the fourteeners specifically, I ran across the word, “Crux.”  Up until then I did not know the etymology of the term. I thought it meant the heart of the problem, which it does, but that was it, “heart of problem.” It actually is a thing a real thing and when we use the term or phrase, “crux of the problem” it seems to me we may be using a metaphor.

Turns out a crux is also real thing.  It is a place. It is a place where sometimes people breathe their last breaths where the minutes that people have yet to live are measured in only single or double digits.  It is a place where the lives of people experiencing joy and excitement, awe and wonder abruptly end. The crux is an important place to know.

In order to achieve the summit on some of the fourteeners in Colorado one must traverse, hike, scramble, and/or climb up through the crux.  The crux is usually the only way up to the summit The crux is difficult and dangerous. It is like a funnel. There are multiple routes to and from the crux.  A mountain’s difficulty rating is based on the difficulty of the crux. The route may be just a hike or a walk. Maybe you could even take a mountain bike up the route but if the crux is rated at say a class 4 scramble, the difficulty of the route is categorized a class 4.  Class 4 is generally regarded as sort of the no-man’s land or nether region between where ropes are or are not required to safely achieve the summit. The consequence of unsuccessfully navigating a class 4 scramble or climb is death. Not impairment, not a long hospital stay, not paraplegia just death.  This is what makes class 4, class 4. As a point of reference, as I write this book, If my life were like a climb up one of these fourteeners with a class 4 crux, I am on that crux right now. I know that I am in the crux and this is one of the reasons for this book.

I am perched in a vertical crack around 13,800 ft above sea level.  I have a little over half the oxygen I would have if I were at the beach.  I have one foot mashed up against one wall and the other foot mashed up against the opposing side creating a compressive friction grip between my body and the crack in the wall.  I have one hand on a solid rock above me and I am reaching for another rock above that. That rock, I have lightly tested. I have pushed on it from below checking for any movement.  That rock can not waver in the slightest. I have tested and retested. As I begin that reach I am preparing to relax my legs in order to slightly release the compressive grip my feet exert on the opposing walls of the crack.  The “plan” is to release my feet slightly, pull my body up with my arm that is currently engaged with the solid rock. I will do this quickly so that momentum will send my other hand above the rock I am trying to grab my target rock.  My hand needs move above and over that rock in order to gain a solid and complete purchase that will bear my weight until my legs and feet can regain the friction grip on the opposing walls of the crack.

The reward of  a successful completion on this move is my life.  I get to keep it. There is nothing but air between me and the ground fifteen hundred feet below.  Not that it would matter but fifteen hundred feet below me are rocks the size of SUV’s, refrigerators, and small houses that from my vantage point look like pebbles.  At least that’s what I think they would look like if I were to look. There is no value in looking down. The only thing that matters is the task at hand which I will perform without thinking.  

That’s right, I don’t actually think about this and to be honest there usually isn’t a plan.  I mean it’s not like I actually think it out like I am preparing a set of instructions as outlined above.  More accurately it goes something like the following: My feet are holding me up in the crack and my left hand is wrapped around a solid rock above me and I see the target rock above that one.  I test the target rock by pushing on it from below which is the only thing that may be considered as a plan because it involves very deliberate and detailed forethought. My presence is required here my absolute undivided attention.  My life will depend on that rock. Then in less than a second, in less than any time it would take to actually think about what I am about to do. I relax my foot hold, hoist myself up, swing my right arm up, grab the fucking rock and re-engage my foot hold in the crack.  This is my life right now.

“Really?  Are you serious?  It’s that fucking dire?  Don’t you think you are being a bit melodramatic here?” You may be asking yourself.

Well, yes and no.  To some extent I am over dramatizing the situation but if you were to get inside of my head at some choice moments usually late at night as I am trying to get to sleep or early in the morning as I am waking up you might bear witness to how dire the situation is.  I mentioned earlier, “I know that I am in the crux and this is one of the reasons for this book.” How do I know I am in the crux? An indication that I am perched in a crack fifteen hundred feet in the air was expressed by me in a therapy session. I said, “I don’t think anybody would notice if I were gone.”  This seemed to raise more of an alarm than a sentence like, “Nobody cares about me.” which I have also uttered. That second sentence is important too. I guess. But for some reason; and I don’t know why, but the first one raised the hair on the back of therapist’s neck. We will be doing work on this one. So you’ve caught me perched here in this crack with my feet mashed up against its opposing walls hanging by my left hand from a rock above.  I am desperately looking for the next rock.

At this point, there is no turning back.  Welcome to the shit show!

On the Mountain: Day 2

Like I said, I had no idea I was on the mountain but there I was.  It happened as soon as I opened the door and put my feet on the ground.  I often wonder when this happened. It may have been that day at former employer when I said “yes” to the recruiter to accept the job in Flagstaff.  I can imagine in slow motion the “Y” in yes beginning it’s annunciation starting as a breath of air in my lungs then traveling through my larynx, up through my mouth, over my tongue and through my lips. Simultaneously my legs slide sideways out of the car door with my boots exiting first.  And as the “s” in “yes” completes it’s hiss traveling through my tongue and palate, my boots connect solidly with the ground and my body is no longer connected in any meaningful way to the Forerunner. I am on the mountain.

Thursday, December 20, 2018

On the Mountain

Approaching the mountain my stomach is in knots.  My head spins.  The talk inside my head is crazy.  There are two people there - in my head - as I approach the mountain and/or trail head.  This is the conversation:

"I can't believe you're doing this.  Really!?  Seriously!?  C'mon just turn around, go back into town, get a room for the night and go back home in the morning.  Or wait better yet, you could just turn around and go back home now.  You could be having coffee and eating dunkin' donuts in the morning.

Okay, yeah, you're rig. . .   Wait a second, No! I am here!  I drove all this way.  People know I am coming up here to do this.  What will I tell them.

What will you tell them!?  You gotta fucking be kidding me.  Tell them you ran into bad weather.  Tell them it was too difficult.  Tell them you almost fell to your fucking death.  Tell them anything.

But I don't want to miss out.

Miss out!  Miss out!  What the fuck!  Miss out on what!?  Miss out on all the pain and exhaustion!?  Miss out on getting yourself (wait what am I saying?) us - getting "us" killed!.   What is your problem!?

I've got to do this.  It's going to be awesome.  It always is.  After the first few steps it'll be okay.  Really the suckiest part is the hike up to the climb.

No!  No!  No!  It's not going to be okay and it won't be awesome.  You're fucking crazy! This whole thing is fucking crazy!  Five people died there last year  or what about that kid who slipped and fell on Little Bear.  What happens if you climb up something you can't climb down.  What if you fall and are immobilized and starve to death or you get hypothermia.  You can't be doing this.  You're not going to do it.

Yeah, I know.  But I'm here now.  Let's just get out and we'll walk a ways and turn around.

As I open the door the voice is a bit more panicky:

"NO! NO! NO!"

I try to counter, "Just calm down.  Just take it easy."

I step out and put both feet on the ground and think, "This is really happening."

I walk around to the back and lift hatch back on the Forerunner.  A more panicky voice returns:

"You're not going to turn around are you.  You're putting on your pack you fuck!  You lied to me.  Just take off the pack.  Put it back in the car.  We can drive away you and I and pretend this think never happened.  Come on!"  It pleads in desperation.

After I have my pack on and the poles in my hand,  I take my first few steps across the road to climb over the barbed wire fence.  The voice is in full on panic mode but decrescendos into background.

"Awe C'mon now.  Turn around.  For the love of God turn the fuck around would ya please.  This is insanity.  You don't need to prove any. . . "

The much more quiet voice deep inside just says, "You've got to do this Andy.  You really don't have a choice.  You really never had.  Just put one foot in front of the other  We'll be okay."

The volume of the cadence of the hike emerges and takes over.  I no longer hear that voice.









Monday, December 17, 2018

The summit

Wendy lay in the bed sleeping.  At this point she was a living thing.  I was going to say, "She was just a living thing."  But I can't seem to bring my self to use that sense of the word "just" as in "simply", "merely", "only", etc. . with regard to Wendy.  There is very little about Wendy that can be described as "just this" or "just that."  She wasn't "just!"  She wasn't "just" anything.

But on that Sunday morning she lay there sleeping with the nasal cannulas in her nose and the machine whirring and hissing in the background.  It was like the oxygen generator was gasping for her.  She laid there motionless.  Her chest imperceptibly moving.  The mass of Wendy that occupied that bed that morning was but a fraction of what she was a month earlier.  She could no longer support herself in any other position other than horizontal.

All the beauty, all the grace, all the wonderful little intricacies that were Wendy lay there in that bed.  All the lovely words that were spoken in love in anger in laughter  in question and in truth lay there in that bed.  Those eyes that looked at me in dis-belief when I asked her to marry me - that looked at me in confusion about what was happening to her during her last few days of consciousness lay there in that bed on that grey day in December.

It became apparent at some point between the time Larry left and noon that that day would be the day she would summit.  I didn't see it as a summit though.  I didn't even know I was on a mountain.

Saturday, December 15, 2018

A grey day on the hill - the gift of not knowing.

It is a grey day.  It seems it's like a bad day on the hill.


I walk away
It seems it's like a bad day
On the hill
I stand and stare away
Hoping for a brighter day
And I stand staring there
And I stand staring there today
-Toni Childs, House of Hope - 1991

And it will be a bad day.  It will be my worst.  To this day I can not say I have had a worse day before or since.  Maybe I have but I guess I don't want to get caught up in comparison.

Larry comes over in the morning.  He brings donuts and coffee.  Dunkin' Donuts®, the chocolate creme filled kind.  Coffee with cream.  Three years later to this day, that cream in it's packages still sits in the refrigerator.  When he comes through the front door as he passes through the living room he says hi to an unresponsive Wendy.  The oxygen machine continues to whir and hum in it's never ending cadence as the day marches to it's inevitable conclusion.

We go to the kitchen and talk.  I don't even remember what we talk about.  It seems to me it was like any other Sunday and I really didn't think anything was up.  Wendy had not been conscious for some time as in a day or two.  She may have been conscious in these last couple of days but it has not been apparent.

I don't even remember when she was last conscious.  Should I?  It feels like  I should. It may have been that previous Wednesday.  She may have been barely conscious on late Friday afternoon, December 4th.  I think at that point I was wanting her to not regain consciousness.  This is something I don't think I would have ever imagined thinking about someone.  Especially someone I loved so dearly.  I did love her didn't I?  These questions like when was she last conscious?  What were my last words to her?  What were her last words to me?  Did I love her enough?  These questions and many others like these have haunted me ever since.  All of them I can't answer.  All of them have answers but they are lost to me.

We were traveling fast.  Time was whizzing by taking all the little precious important details right along with it.  It is kind of like the draining of a bath tub.  In the beginning and for most of it you can't tell anything is happening.  The level is dropping but almost imperceptibly and then at some point you can see the bottom of the tub.  The murkiness of the soap starts to give way to to the color at the bottom and then the texture becomes apparent.  As the water level approaches the drain you can see the bubbles moving faster and faster toward the vortex until they make that last quick swirl and the ploop down the drain they go and it's all gone.  In those last couple of moments there is no time to catalog the details, record images, make notes of this is the last time this happens or this is the last time that happens because you need to be able to predict the future in order to understand you are experiencing something for the last time.  In the words of the mighty "Floyd"
"The time is gone, the song is over.
Thought I'd something more to say"
Every once in a while I would catch something.  But it wasn't like I could catch it while it was happening.  Like I said, I would need to be clairvoyant so it is only after she died that I was able to know that the last night we shared a bed would be on November 19th 2015.  On November 20th of 2015 she went into the hospice bed in the living room and would remain there until the end except to go to the bathroom as long as she was able to. She was very lucid on that night.  In fact it was kind of just another night with her except she was lying in the bed instead of on the couch.  Our friend Tara had come over like she did on Saturday nights and we would talk and visit and laugh.  That night was no different other than we decided that it would be best to have her sleep in the hospice bed.  I would sleep on the couch along side the bed.  Incidentally Tara would spend all the nights there in the guest bedroom until December 6th as well.  But November 19th of 2015 was the last night I would put my arm around her stomach and lock my legs in behind hers as we would spoon and drift off to sleep.

I can't tell you that if I would have known that that was the last night if that would have been a good thing or not.  If I would have known that that was the last night I would spend spooning with her it probably would have completely wrecked the experience.  If I would have known it, how could I not think about that being the last night.  I would have never gotten to sleep and therefore would not have had the warm comfortable experience of falling asleep with our bodies entangled.  In fact, as I write this it is becoming clear that not knowing stuff like, "this is the last night" or "these are our last words" is actually a gift.

Summit - December 6th, 2018.

And life carries on and on and on.  Life carries on and on.

They say life carries on and on and on
Life carries on in the people I meet
In everyone that's out on the street
In all the dogs and cats
In the flies and rats
In the rot and the rust
In the ashes and the dust
Life carries on and on and on and on
Life carries on and on and on
Life carries on and on and on and on
Life carries on and on and on
Just the car that we ride in
The home we reside in
The face that we hide in
The way we are tied in
As life carries on and on and on and on
Life carries on and on and on
Did I dream this belief
Or did I believe this dream?
Now I will find relief
I grieve
- Peter Gabriel, I Grieve.

This would go at the beginning of the book.  It seems like it is total full on cliche though.

I actually don't know where to begin.  I suppose I should just begin at the beginning but where is that.  Where is the beginning and where am I right now.  It seems clear to me that the summit of my relationship with Wendy happened on December 6th, 2018.  I have been in descent ever since.  So this would be my only known reference point. 

Summit - December 6th, 2018.  

Some more thoughts