[pct-l] Options
Jeffrey Olson
jolson at olc.edu
Tue Apr 5 20:43:45 CDT 2011
One of the nice things about being in my late 50s is I have lots of time
to plan, and lots of options. I've applied for another faculty position
in a warmer climate. I'm not counting on it happening, so a month or so
ago I got on Craig's Planner and laid out a three month trip (July
through September) from Bend to Mt. Whitney. I got the ok to take the
fall semester off if I wanted, so that's hanging out in the wind. If
they want me back they'll pay my medical insurance...
One friend has said he's interested in hiking the last month with me.
Another would meet me for a week in Seiad. My brother-in-law is primed
for a week. That's enough company to keep me from getting too far into
my head I think. Having done numerous long section hikes I am leery of
hiking alone for too long. I get a little crazy.
I'm one of those people who can't listen to books on tape because what's
happening in my head is far more interesting. And left alone for too
long, the paths I travel tend to get distorted with emotion. I used to
think hiking alone was the be all, end all. I remember snorting
internally when a young man hiking north shared he couldn't handle
hiking alone. He had a haunted look in his eyes, beseeching almost. I
was alone on a section hike, and he was seeking validation. I gave it
to him, but remember holding myself aloof. What a jerk I was...
My girlfriend and I were all stoked to hike for a couple months in 1994
when a week before we were to leave she got a job she couldn't turn
down. There I was, all primed to repeat an experience we'd had a couple
years previously that was the best hiking I'd ever done. There is
nothing like hiking with a partner/lover - nothing at all. Some of my
clearest and fondest life memories come from that trip...
I took off from I-5 near Callahans and headed north to Canada. I think
I was still in shock and actually headed out to do the trip just because
the momentum to do it - the planning - carried me along. To be honest,
I wasn't prepared to spend day after day alone. I was part of the
proverbial "We!" And then I was alone. Rip, tear, rend and shatter...
About 10 days into the trip I was hiking on a flat section of the Oregon
desert - that part that seems to go on for miles of sand and 50' pines
and no undergrowth or water. I was hot and tired and thirsty and hungry
and realized that I'd been keeping "my reality" at bey since I'd found
out Janey wasn't coming along. I just flat out wasn't enjoying myself.
Everything was stark, timeless, an eternal moment stretching outwards to
temporal infinity. Sure I'd lose myself in coping, in setting up camp
or a beautiful view. But the foreground moment was deep and weighty -
portentous.
It was about 11 in the morning and I was walking and hot and tired and
thirsty and hungry. I let out a groan, and then a soft scream, and then
a huge ARGHHH. I continued to walk. Tears started coursing down my
cheeks. All I could think of was how lonely I was, how much I'd rather
be hanging out with my friends and drinking beer or whatever. I
continued to walk.
"I'm not having any fun." I sputtered. "I want my Mom!"
I moaned and cried and blubbered down the trail. I could feel the ten
days of hiking and two weeks of being without Janey just come crashing
through me in my sobbing. I walked and cried and bawled and mewed and
walked and made sure that no one was coming down the trail to see me
like this. There was a rational part of me watching me just break down
emotionally. But that was like 5% of where I was. The rest of me just
hurt intensely as I walked.
I bawled in great gasps and hitchings of breath. One foot in front of
the other, the constant - I'd stop for a emotionally for a moment and
notice my rhythm, and just melt again. I could feel my face screw up
into an unattractive prune time after time as the wave of pain coursed
through me, my body sliding down a washboard time after time after time
sloughing off into sobbing and blubbering.
After 10 minutes or so my sobs lost their shuddering depth. I'd moan
and catch my breath and inhale with little quavers and continue to
walk. I started taking more regular breaths that weren't as driven by
my pain. I'd inhale deeply and let out my breath. Inhale and release.
Inhale and release.
I could feel the pain. I could feel it just like I could feel the
breeze caress my cheek. I could feel my chest just expand and expand
with it as I put one foot in front of the other. Where only minutes
before I'd been riding the crest of two weeks of denial I was hurting,
now I was on the ebb tide, the pain flatter and morphing. Morphing...
It was changing. I waited for the next wave to wind my guts into
sobbing emoting, for an unexpected twisting. A breeze now, a wafting
thing outside of me - this pain.
It wasn't sudden, but suddenly I found myself walking without touching
the trail. My body suddenly had parts moving in synchronous counterpart
to one another. I was light as a feather, riding a rhythm emerging from
my exhausted emotionality. I was dancing down the trail, my heart
shining through every movement, every step, every twist of my body as I
put one foot in front of the other. I reveled. Where only minutes
earlier I'd been trodding with the weight of my pained world bearing my
shoulders down, ever down into complex, dense emotion, one foot in front
of the other, now I was leaping and cavorting within putting one foot in
front of the other - walking down the trail.
Cognitively I was awakening within an emotional space rare in my life.
I was in harmonious balance inside the hiking. I realized I was not
having fun, that this trip was perhaps a bad choice. But I also
realized I was not a ping pong ball, a victim of my emotions, my choices
driven by the depths of raw suffering. I may not have been having fun,
but dammit if I was going to leave the trail because I was overly
emotional. I was a "Man" - capable of feeling deeply without being
driven by deep feeling to act irrationally because I hurt.
What became apparent as the days marched on, was that my emotions rode a
roller coaster. I'd go down, and I'd walk. I'd go up, and I'd walk. I
was this emotional being putting one step in front of the other to
achieve the goal of continuing to put one foot in front of the other.
Up and down, up and down - my day was so rich with feeling and the
wonderings that come from unbridled freedom to just be. Think about
it. How often are we able to just be in the moment, one after the next,
with no external controls on anything???
I knew I couldn't leave the trail because I hurt. For the next 25 days
I rode the tail of the emotional beast as I walked. I think I became
"healthy" during these 25 days. I hurt deeply, intensely, and cried
more often than I want to remember. I also felt the exquisite rhythm in
walking where I was part of a universe mostly invisible but light and
palpable and threading through emotions grounded in an ecstasy I've not
managed to experience since. To fall so far down into an emotional
gravity well and then find myself riding the crest of balance of all
forces - all in a half hour. Up and down and up and down, all the while
putting one foot in front of the other hiking the Pacific Crest Trail
north to the end of my hike.
I did hike for 25 more days. I got used to letting myself feel deeply.
The constant, the center, the core of the most intense emotional
experience of my 42 years was putting one foot in front of the other on
the trail. I took away a sense of "who" I was that I can't imagine
finding anywhere else. Where else can a moment to moment activity
support such emotional exploration? I am a child of the universe, of
God, of Samadhi, of The Eternal, of Taku Ksan Ksan..
The power of my emotions came from being released from the strictures of
day to day life in the world. My resolution was finding myself as the
center within the amplitudinal extremes. I was high and depressed -
both expressing release from the norms that limit and define.
"I" am the center of their coursing flow. I continue to walk, to put
one foot in front of the other. I walk in the wondering realization
that all of us walk in the grand adventure of living.
And to think I very well might have 90 days this summer and fall to once
again put one foot in front of the other and hike until my trip is
over. I'm excited and scared...
Jeffrey Olson
Martin, SD
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