David Baum — Change Through Delight

Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind. --Dr. Seuss

Monday, April 13, 2009

The Ice Storm

It has been a long winter in New Hampshire. The weather has been tough, the days cold, and even now, in mid-April, the mornings are 30 degrees. This makes for a weariness of spirit that is palpable on many people's faces.

Last December we also had an ice storm, which left my town without power for ten days. During the darkest time of the year, that's ten days with no heat, electricity, hot water or light. I am a creature of my comforts, and it was a difficult struggle. For a few days it was fun, but as each day rolled into the next, and we all got dirtier, colder and more worried, the winter took it's toll. My daughter told me to think of it as a test of my character, and I thought, "If this is a test, then I am getting a solid C minus".

The day after the storm had massive tree loss as well. People looked out on their properties and gardens, many of whom had lovingly tended their land for many years, but now saw total devastation. One friend, who had painstakingly developed a cross-country ski center over four decades, had it all destroyed in one night. The phrase, "Looked like a bomb went off" was said more times than I can remember. The old timers commented that not since the hurricane of 1938 had the town suffered so much damage. The sound of cracking tree limbs for the days following was like gunfire going off again and again. It made everyone a bit jumpy.

Our home, a farm house over 230 years old, with massive pines and maples, was significantly effected. The days following the storm we hauled out 14 dump trucks of tree limbs, and that was only the start. I couldn't get to my barn, the limbs were so deep. When two feet of snow fell a week later, it was almost a relief, because now the ground was covered. But Spring brought a melt, and with it the reality of a clean-up that will take some many years to complete.

Time and money, of course, can right many a problem. This year is no different. The checks are being written, and my bones are quite weary at times from all the hauling and raking. Plus, we've had a lot of help. But still, the loss has been significant, and sometimes my heart breaks a little when I see the damage done to a two-hundred-year-old maple that was my favorite tree. It was a particular beauty, with massive limbs that came out at right angles to the trunk and then arched skyward 60 feet. Some of those great branches are now gone, snapped from the weight of the ice. My garden, a source of great pride and creative effort over the years, was also damaged, and many of my favorite shrubs and plants have been destroyed.

Gardeners like to comment with any loss, "It's an opportunity to try something new", but truth be told, it is a bit too fresh these days for optimistic cliche. That said, I was moved today by the haiku of the poet Masahide, who wrote, "Since my house burnt down / I now have a better view / of the rising moon."

Tonight is a clear, cold sky and I can see the moon rising through the now open woods. There is a great horned owl calling for a mate from a broken tree. After a long day, this moon and sound, makes me feel better. In the end some things never change, even in the midst of so much of it. One is this. We take our hope where we can, the best that we can, knowing that nature and time will always bring us another chance to try again.

Kilimanjaro

In January, I found myself in Tanzania. I was attempting to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa and seventh tallest in the world. It's summit is over 23,000 feet. Most climbing stories are filled with conquest, or at least heroic survival in the face of difficult odds. This is not one of them.

I didn’t finish. I didn’t even come close. In fact, my adventure was one of the shortest climbs in Kili history.

When I arrived at the town of Kilimanjaro, I was very sick. I didn’t know it but I was coming down with the flu. I thought maybe I had gotten some food poisoning, having had a bad ostrich “Philly Cheese Steak” the night before. I assumed my stomach would quickly get better. Travel sickness for me is usually a "pass through", remedied with over the counter medication.

However, the next day, I was not feeling different. Instead I just lay in my hot, small and depressing room, the click, click, click of a fan overhead, sweating, feverish, and frequently vomiting. I was sick, as in only "Africa sick", which is a special kind of horror. Unless you've been there it's hard to describe, but suffice to say, death seems like a workable option.

Having missed my first days departure, I tried again the next morning, feeling a bit stronger. I had paid a lot of money, told a lot of people I was going, did a lot of planning and traveled a long way to make this climb. I did not want to be denied so I put forward a good face and headed out. I assumed all would be well. Sadly, I assumed wrong.

I went up a trail called Rongai, which is described as the easiest path to the summit. It is gentle and sloping. Rongai has the highest success rate of any of the trails up Kilimanjaro. At the first camp, after a normally easy hike of two hours and ten thousand feet, I collapsed into my tent. I had been "two exits, no waiting" the entire hike up, rushing into the bush every ten minutes. Though incredibly nauseous, to my horror, my porters kept trying to feed me

Dabid, you must eat," came the plea.

“Please" I moaned. "I need to rest!”

Dabid! Please. Will be very bad if you do not. Have potat and soup and pasta and chicken,” came more strident wide-eyed efforts.

“OK", I weakly submitted. "Potato. But then sleep."

I meekly pushed some food around on my plate, and lay staring.

That night was filled with hourly up and outs from my small tent into the cold mountain air. Sweating, feverish, I vomited and worse. I think there is a special place in hell called "African bush toilet" and I was there with frightening regularity. At about four o'clock in the morning I knew I was not going a step closer to the summit. Not even close. I was done. My goal to climb Kili was over.

It was pretty clear from morning conversations with my guide that he agreed. If I could not climb a simple trail for a few hours, than I might die if I pushed into harsh conditions. At the moment I only wished I was dead, and that's a big difference from the real thing. So, we decided to stay at camp an extra day, enjoy the most of what we could, rest, and then head back down the trail to the entrance. It was not a hard decision, as my body made it for me.

That next day in camp I hung with my crew, telling lots of stories and doing lots of singing. I got to know my porters, cooks and guides in a way one usually does not because you are often separated by protocols and the task at hand. But since I was “the boss” and there was no task at hand, all I craved was conversation. We talked about family, life in Tanzania, how hard and cold Kili is at the top, and that my guide had summited over 200 times. I found out he was the guide for Jimmy Carter, when he climbed Kili, though apparently he too didn’t summit. President Carter did, however, go a lot further than me. Of course, so close to the election, we also talked a lot about Obama. We ended the day speaking of the dreams we had for our children and the world. As night fell, we said "Lala salama", or "Good night" before heading to our separate tents.

The next day I hiked down to where I had started. My legs still wobbly, but feeling better. Tanzania is very concerned with bureaucracy and the leaving of a park when you are not supposed to is no different. The last morning after breakfast, I was introduced to the area ranger who asked me to fill out the log book. It was an old accountants ledger, musty smelling, ratty and falling apart. I called it “The Book of Shame”, because while you filled it out, the ranger making sure no mistakes were made, pointed out each item to be accurately completed. There was a column for your name, passport number, number in your party, etc. There was exactly ten columns for data, including the reason you were leaving early, and again why you needed to leave early.

This was the first camp, and not too hard to reach, so there were few entries in the book. In fact, the last entry was six months earlier, and in ten years of log keeping they had compiled exactly forty entries. You do the math. Suffice to say, I was in a very select group. The ranger gave me a dismissive look that said, “You sad sad man”, snapped close the log and whipped away without a word.

When I exited the park, I was again asked to sign an identical book with an identical looking ranger. I called this log, “The Book of Failure”. Same questions, same procedure, and same attitude. To add insult to injury, the ranger concluded by saying, “Please sir. Sit here. Not with the porters”, separating me as if I was an infected leper. It takes some serious “I’m OK, you’re OK” not to feel totally demoralized when twice reminded of how little was accomplished. Following a two hour ride back to the hotel, and a quick shower, I was headed home to New Hampshire.

So? Here's the question. After thousands of dollars, untold hours of training and planning, not to mention the travel, was it worth it?

I can only say this.

During my first dreadful night of sickness on the mountain, I dreamt a lot about pineapple and apple cider. I was so parched from fever and dehydration that my dreams had me drinking or trying to drink all through the night. In the morning, exhausted and weary, and confronting my quick abandonment of the mountain, I asked my cook, "Do you have pineapple?" His face erupted into a smile. Ten minutes later a plate emerged with bright yellow slices of fruit. As I sat watching the sun rise on Kilimanjaro, enjoying a sense of peace that can only come from total detachment, I took my first bite. The taste was indescribable. It was the best pineapple I had ever tasted. In fact, it was the best damn thing I had ever tasted, period. Kilimanjaro, which had so clearly humbled me, had also brought me to a state of complete bliss. It was an extraordinary moment.

Carl Jung said, "Every defeat for the ego is a victory for the soul." On Kilimanjaro, the victory in what had been accomplished for my soul was through a most unlikely route. I was again reminded that sometimes we grow more through subtraction than addition, and in what is not accomplished is where our greatest forward progress can occur.