It's all sport climbing to me

Why do we travel down new roads?

There are a lot of ways to answer that question. In searching for these answers, I’ve been remembering the importance of listening to people. Even though two roads might converge at some point, we will never be on the same path and you learn a heck of lot more from listening than talking. And while all paths will crisscross and move together and apart (and sometimes back together again), they eventually bring you to a place of happiness and fulfillment that is yours and yours alone.

It’s why I think it’s so important not to hitch my wagon to anybody else’s (for now). I’ve done that before, and I’ve almost done it again. It’s a fail-safe that I’ve used as a crutch in probably all of my relationships.

This is now the reason why I tend to shy away from relationships, but it also forces me to ask myself if I’m really ready for one. In my heart of hearts, I know that nobody is really ready for anything; things happen, life happens, and we roll with those punches. But I also know that the more time I spend, not searching for myself, but creating and figuring myself out, the less likely I will be to wind up in another fail-safe situation.

Besides, I’m in a 100 percent committed relationship with my dog; she takes up less room in the car when we’re sleeping.

Shooter is convinced she is a (65 pound) lapdog. Mark accepts

Shooter is convinced she is a (65 pound) lapdog. Mark accepts

Anyway, I’m staring at this new beginning that I’m holding in my hands and it wants to shape itself intosomething but isn’t sure what it wants to be yet. I’m patient, though. I know if I stop wondering about what it will become, it will just happen when I’m ready.

So I took these new feelings to an old, familiar place. West Virginia was the first place outside of the Gunks that felt like home to me: Fayetteville is home to climbers and Gauly people alike. Fayetteville is home, period. No matter where I travel during the year, my heart remains here in its timeless summer days at the lake and in quiet moments spent on Colleen Laffey’s beautiful property.

Visiting Colleen’s is always like stepping into Wonderland a little bit

Visiting Colleen’s is always like stepping into Wonderland a little bit

Paul Nelson, campground manager at the American Alpine Club down here, friend and all around nice guy, and I went to the Greatest Show Area in the Meadows this week. We both share a love for the New River Gorge climbing, probably above all other crags on the east coast. New River itself has well over 1,000 established routes to climb on some of the most beautiful sandstone rock I’ve laid eyes on.

“Get ready to gawk.” Paul told me as we hiked down the trail.

And did I, ever.

Until that day, I’d only seen pictures of Mango Tango (5.14a), a beautiful arete that overhangs just enough to make you pee your pants a little bit. And then the unmistakable route, The Greatest Show (5.13a). Breathtaking isn’t quite the word for it because it doesn’t take your breath away; it literally steals it and runs off into the woods, leaving you goggling without words. The first section is incredibly R-rated, but beyond a very finger-y looking roof, is a BEAUTIFUL corner crack.

I did the entire climb so much injustice right now, so it’s better if you just go and see for yourself.

Paul Brenner on the starting moves of Puppy Chow, possibly one of (if not, THE) best 12 sport climb in NRG

Paul Brenner on the starting moves of Puppy Chow, possibly one of (if not, THE) best 12 sport climb in NRG

Around the corner from a sport climb Paul Brenner was working on called Puppy Chow (5.12c), was a 5.12 crack that stays dry in the rain. Lynn Hill’s Big Top was put up, Paul Nelson said, when she came down and did The Greatest Show.

The climbing began way left of the route with careful movement up onto nice ledges (the alternative being an unprotectable 5.11 start on the face). Below the roof, I took a moment to listen to nothing. The sound of the meadow river behind me brought me back, and I began to move through the roof where I could clip a few fixed guys we’d seen from the ground. Then, begin the splitter crack (which was the trickiest of cracks!)

I’d given Puppy Chow an attempt earlier, and when I was figuring out how to reach the ledge on the roof with my height, I took a fall or two. No big deal. It was all on permadraws and every fall was clean and into open air. I had repeatedly grabbed an ear with my right hand, brought my left foot high (aka my knee was in my mouth) and tried to lock off and crawl my left hand up the crack to the ledge. It seemed just out of reach every time, and then in one desperate push I’d reach the ledge, but as my feet cut, the ledge was useless and I came down.

Like I said, no big deal. It’s sport climbing. It’s falling on a roof. Maybe I bled a little bit, but you’re not having fun until someone is bleeding.

Right?

Paul Brenner heading to the roof on Puppy Chow (5.12c)

Paul Brenner heading to the roof on Puppy Chow (5.12c)

But there I was, working out the crux of Big Top’s crack, scared pretty much shitless (and not in the funny “I’m going to poop myself” way). I was about five or six feet above what I’d originally thought was a marginal purple C3 placement (it turns out, it probably would have taken a fall just fine because it was a b-word to clean) when I placed a truly marginal Totem and then a truly TRULY marginal red C3 placement.

In the middle of a crux, I had somehow convinced my fingers to hold on long enough to slot it inside. Feeling better and finally ready to move past it, it wiggled out and I caught it in my hand. I wanted to cry. I wiggled it back inside and leaned back, stammering to Paul, “Take lightly! Take lightly please.”

Lydia McDonald made a joke, saying that this is why trad climbing is scary. And it’s probably true for most people: trad climbing can be scary, in instances such as this, and sport climbing seen as relatively fun and safe. I think, at some point, we’ve all heard a trad climber refer to it as “vacation” climbing.

Lydia styling the traverse on Just Another Pretty Face (5.11)

Lydia styling the traverse on Just Another Pretty Face (5.11)

Instead of giving my fingers a rest, I kept both hands on as to not weight the piece entirely because when I looked up, that bitchy C3 was completely passive. Completely and utterly.

On the ground, I rattled off my “I’m sorry’s” and list of excuses and Paul said, “Hey. Are you satisfied with your try?”

I smiled and said, “Yeah, most definitely.”

Paul Nelson asked me how I liked Big Top (and I did; I liked it a lot!) but I also told him that lately, I’d taught myself to become afraid of falling again. It’s kind of a weird, backwards progression. Some days, it’s one step forward and two back. That’s all. Understandably so, as some of the things I’ve been so stoked to get on and try have become harder in grade and in that, harder to protect. Sometimes, we place the bad gear and acknowledge that it’s a piece of shit, and are able to climb onward because it gives us a little bit of that mental comfort (“Well, maybe it will hold or at the very least it could slow down my fall.”)

And other times, we place it and just want to cry (or pee, or both).

Maybe it’s not a bad thing that I’ve been feeling scared of falling on gear again. Maybe that’s the thing that will keep me safe, and more importantly, alive.

SPEAKING of safe and alive, I am never not wearing a helmet again. No, there was no incident that led to this decision, and there was also no singular moment that led to the decision not to wear one. Wearing one during my climbing was just something that had tapered off over time, but I’ve basically come to the conclusion that I don’t need to wait for something bad to happen to start doing something right.

Climbing snotsicles in Ouray, Colorado this January

Climbing snotsicles in Ouray, Colorado this January

​Paul and I had talked about how there was such a huge increase in helmet usage in the ski world. I think there had been a fatal accident with a very well known skier (his name escapes me) which contributed to this. I don’t necessarily want this pattern to repeat in the climbing world, so maybe if everybody started leading by example, it would make a difference. And hey, thanks to all of my friends who have poked and prodded me over the last few months about it – I love you, you know?

Anyway, teaching myself to get over that particular fear all over again is a curious task. It’s a road I’ve been down before, and even though I thought I’d gotten through it in my first year of climbing trad, I’m back at the same detour. Only this time, the terrain is a little bit different – or maybe I am.

I have to backpedal a little bit, but that ultimately doesn’t mean I’m not getting anywhere. All of the things I’ve been questioning about myself, I am RIGHT to question. And I have to remember that, in the end, falling is no big deal. Recovery is quick and effortless. I’ll learn to be okay with it again; maybe that’s when the confidence comes back and in the end, it’s all just sport climbing to me.

Some like the crusts on

Ivy is my favorite almost five-year-old kid who I came to know and love through absolute happenstance. We were making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches one afternoon and as I was cutting the crust off of her bread, she looked up at me and said: “You know, some people like the crusts on and some like them off.”

I wiped my hands together and thought, “Cool. My job here is done.”

The friends you choose in life are meant to be your teachers. My greatest teachers always seem to be four (I’m okay with that).

I forget how much we can learn from the cognitive mind of every almost five-year-old. Five is kind of a big deal; you start to become an enthusiastic problem solver and substantially more social (I recall attending WAY more birthday parties at five than I did four).

Ivy’s “EVERYTHING IN LIFE IS A PARTY” face

Do you know the feeling of leaning back in a chair, and then you lean back a little too far and start to fall, and JUST at the last second, you catch yourself? I’d been running around the tri-state area, and finally with less than a week left in the northeast, everything in my life started breaking: my car suddenly developed break issues, random and expensive tickets that hadn’t been paid off yet started popping up in the mail and my hard drive exploded. I was ready to strangle somebody…maybe the dog.

And then enter the uncertainty that comes in many waves, and at all of the most inopportune times. Of course, it would be much more convenient if I could be feeling one hundred percent confident about my decisions, but fears and doubts don’t really work that way.

But the point is to not pick goals where the stakes are so low.

Back to my first year learning to trad climb in the Gunks. Photograph by Dan Cohen

During a small goodbye brunch on Sunday, Oscar Zambrano told me about a job offer his father had received years ago. It would basically pay for the rest of his retirement, and he accepted and was handed a check. Not too long after, he was offered a once in a lifetime opportunity to sail around South America – a dream of his for some time. He handed the check back.

Oscar said he didn’t know if he would be able to turn the job down, and I commented on how we never know what decision we’ll make until we’re in a situation where we have to decide. I think I could have leaned towards taking the job offer as well.

Then Oscar asked me: “If you were given the choice of climbing with Alex Honnald in Patagonia or $500,000 in cash, which would you choose?”

I didn’t even blink.

“Patagonia.”

I left brunch with the realization that what makes me happy versus what makes other people happy really is what makes this world such a beautiful place; some like the crusts on, and others like them off. (Any serious sandwich enthusiast can agree that there is no such thing as a “wrong” sandwich.)

Fort Tryon bouldering on Christmas day. Photograph by Dirk Peters

Living in NYC for the past four years, it had become easy to forget about all of the little things that made it so special. It isn’t that I don’t appreciate city life, but there was a considerable amount of time being devoted to scanning guidebooks, researching topo maps and doing gear inventories. You know. When I was sixteen, I declared that I must live in NYC one day to indulge in my love for people, culture, music and art.

Moving to Brooklyn was honestly the scariest thing I could have done at the time. I resisted the idea when Birk and I were still dating, and it’s one of the reasons why we broke up. And now, I consider it my home base. For me, there was no greater place to experiment with who I am than NY.

Home for over two years; I miss this kitchen every day. Photograph by Sean Hamrock

I drove by apartments, brick walls and places where memories of the people I love are deeply ingrained within the structure of each building. They live inside each metal beam and wooden piece; they are the stone, clay and timber.

And now they live in me.

BKB hosted a shindig this past weekend where I was able to say goodbye to the NYC climbing community I’ve been a part of for the past four years. I was moved by the amount of people who made it out, and especially for hearing these words with such consistency: “If you need ANYTHING……you always have a home here”.

Like Jared always says, “Try or fly”. The good old arch at Brooklyn Boulders

George asked me to say a few words, and even though I hate public speaking, I grudgingly I accepted. When I looked out at the small sea of faces, I could feel tears in my eyes but I didn’t cry.

It wasn’t until Sivhoung Prom, a woman I’d met a few years back, pulled me aside on her way out that that it hit me. Life swept her away to Peru for a period of time, but she came back to the city recently and we were able to meet again. She is a climber, a surfer and explorer of life. I love her for her heart. The feeling of two souls that connect but don’t know each other very well is indescribable. Siv says it’s an estranged but familiar energy between us, and maybe we knew each other in another lifetime and are just crossing paths again to be inspired by life.

“Be happy! Let your heart feel.”

Maybe that’s why ANYBODY comes into our lives. Some stay, and others will wander back out – but they’re never far. Distance is only distance, because it’s something love makes leaps and bounds over.

Her eyes were brimmed with tears as she told me that even though we aren’t very close relationship-wise, I was her first climbing friend in NYC and that I had been a huge inspiration to her in the time we’ve known each other.

Her words alone have made every hard question (and all of the answers I didn’t like) during last four years worth it. Because beyond climbing, beyond summits and sends, I have to believe that it’s about the fellowship that comes along with it. It’s never about me; it will always be about us. It’s about the connections we make that we can’t necessarily explain to others but we feel in our hearts.

And we know that they feel it, too.

Climbing makes me happy,” Siv said, “and I remember you telling me a long time ago that climbing made you happy, too.”

Live for happiness, follow your joys and find and give help and inspiration when you can…

My future rope gun

Thank you, Brooklyn Boulders and friends, for sending me off with more love than my heart (or Honda) can carry. You have made my life special by being a part of it.

And here’s to the next adventure!