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Tuesday
Jul092013

What Happened in the Wilderness 

by Nancy King


On a cool sunny dawn, after getting up at 4 a.m., my friend and I began our hike into the Grand Canyon after agreeing that we would each walk at our own pace and meet at the rest stops. She took off and I followed behind, starting down the 14-mile hike on the Kaibab Trail, munching a protein bar and drinking the electrolyte-water in the bladder of my backpack for breakfast. As the golden rays of the sun highlighted huge stone canyon structures, I felt blessed by the beauty surrounding me.


Before we began the hike I was concerned about hiking back up the steep Bright Angel Trail, but it never occurred to me that going down could be a problem. I was totally unprepared for the widely spaced wooden steps and heavily eroded trail in front of me. Down two feet to a log step, then up two feet to the next log step. Down, up, down up, all the time moving down a steep incline. Still, I was contentedly making my way when suddenly I lost 75% of my energy and could barely control where and how I stepped. I began falling backwards as I tried to take a step. My body refused to move normally. I had no idea what was happening to me.

What I did know was that I couldn’t afford to panic and waste my waning energy. I did the only thing I knew to do. I told myself: “Step with the right foot. Step with the left foot.” This kept me going until I reached a rest stop where I fell backwards and discovered I could not get up without the help of a kind hiker. He noticed that blood, dripping from my arm, was bleeding through my shirt. My hiking friend helped me bandage my arm. Fear enveloped me. How would I find the energy to finish the hike?

I didn’t want to admit I was in trouble, but my friend knew something was wrong. She told me I was not only leaning back, I was also tilted to the left side. She suggested we sit and rest in the shade and offered me her salty trail mix. I ate some, trying to pretend that I was fine, forcing myself to ignore my anxiety. When it was time to start hiking again, I took a deep breath and told myself, “You have ten miles to go. All you have to do is put one foot in front of the other. One step at a time.” Left foot. Right foot. Left foot. Right foot. The best I could do was move in slow motion, much slower than my usual pace, even on the gently rolling Tonto Trail.


 
Halfway to Indian Garden, my friend waited for me and asked if I was okay. I could no longer pretend and said, “I don’t think so.” She found a spot with a bit of shade, suggested I sit down, and offered me more of her salty peanut mix. After a brief rest we started toward the green oasis of Indian Garden. When we arrived, I felt enormous relief, and at the same time, trepidation. We still had more than four miles, all up, to hike. As I poured cooling water over my head and clothing, she pointed out the thermometer on the side of the shelter, which registered 90 degrees in the shade! I had already drunk the four liters of water I’d been carrying. Now I would have to drink water without electrolytes. As I filled the bladder of my pack, I pushed away my worries and focused on hiking up the steep trail. Left foot. Right foot.

At the next rest stop, I met up with my friend, who was talking with a hiker. He offered me electrolyte candy and a packet of electrolytes, which he suggested I put in my backpack bladder. Until that moment, worries about failing, disappointing my friend, and loss of control had almost overwhelmed me, but, with my friend’s support, the man’s electrolytes, and hikers I met on the trail who spontaneously offered encouragement, I began to feel more like myself. I started to recover my energy and managed to hike up the Bright Angel trail, slowly and steadily until I reached the top.  Filled with excitement and euphoria, my friend and I celebrated—treating ourselves to delicious ice cream, which we ate while enjoying glorious views of the Canyon.


 
Some days later, another friend and I were walking in the woods, with me in front. Suddenly I gasped, leapt back, and stared in terror at the long Western Diamondback Rattlesnake stretched out along the path in front of us. To avoid upsetting the snake, we took a huge detour around it. Snakes are thought to be a sign of transmutation—they shed their skins yet remain the same creatures. I wondered if seeing the snake was an omen.

The hike in the Canyon, where I found inner strength I didn’t know I had, and then encountering the snake, had a powerful effect on me. I was determined to use these experiences to help me overcome my habitual fear of confronting an emotional bully. I recognized that it was no longer about him. It was about me having the courage to keep centered as I moved on my path, even when the going was rough and the metaphorical boulders blocking my way seemed too huge to move past. I knew that it was time to find the courage to say what I felt, what I thought, what I wanted, when I was in his presence.

The first encounter with him did not go well. I spent the day after our phone call upset and discouraged, wondering if I would ever be able to change a lifelong response of giving away my power, shrinking in fear in the face his anger. I realized that even when I thought about talking to him, my breath grew shallow. I shriveled with dread. Disgusted with this habitual response, I forced myself to do the opposite, taking slow, deep expansive breaths from my abdomen
 
The following day, just as it did on the Kaibab Trail, something happened. This time, when I spoke to myself, it was no longer with my old voice. My Canyon voice had meshed with the message of the rattlesnake: “You can reclaim your power. You can shed the skin that keeps you emotionally imprisoned."

 

Our next phone conversation was difficult. I asked him to please stop interrupting me. When he continued to do so, and accused me of yelling, even though I was purposefully keeping my voice steady, I hung up. The conversation did not go as well as I had hoped, but at least I felt I had stood my ground.

After subsequent interactions, we decided to meet in two months. I have promised myself that when we do, I will have the emotional courage to be who I am, to confront my terror of being fully present in the face of his bullying anger. I refuse to shrink, back down, or fall off the trail. Having the courage to respond in the moment is the issue. I am choosing to walk on a new path, where I have never been, with no map or assurance that I know the way. What I have is my Grand Canyon experience and the unexpected appearance of the rattlesnake.

 

Nancy King's most recent books are three novels: A Woman Walking, Morning Light*, The Stones Speak*, and a nonfiction book, Dancing With Wonder: Self-Discovery Through Stories. You can read excerpts of her books, as well as order them, on her website www.nancykingstories.com.  

[photography by Nancy King and Jeanette Reisenburg]

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Reader Comments (7)

Your stories are so helpful to me. Many of us hike in an emotional wilderness. Many shrink in fear from our bullies then loathe ourselves for it. You battle on, knowing it's worth it, suspecting you may be close to defeating the fear. The world is full of fearful things. Many of those things evaporate or diminish when confronted. In any case, the act of challenging one's fears is liberating. Thank you for encouraging me.

July 10, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterPhil

Inspiring story of courage, tenacity, and putting one foot in front of the other on the path of life.

July 10, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterAndrew

I read this wonderful piece literally holding my breath. I know the back story, but the power of this story made me once again realize what an awesome storyteller you are. That you can find courage in a dangerous place and a sense of who you are by encountering a rattlesnake makes me wonder why you fear anything or anyone at all. YOU ARE AN AMAZING HUMAN BEING WITH A POWER YOU ARE ONLY JUST BEGINNING TO GRASP. Reach for the sky and you will get there, one foot in front of the other.

July 10, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterDiana Wolff

Writing about the inner travel experience that is often part of outer travel poses a special problem for me: How to wrtite about my experience in a way that offers readers the opportunity to reflect on their lives and questions. Your comments help continue the conversation about ways in which we seek to change old coping mechanisms that may have once helped us to survive, but now keep us tethered. Thank you so much for your comments, as well as the spirit with which you wrote them.

July 11, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterNancy King

I was there with you ... in the Grand Canyon. It was, for me too, a humbling and empowering experience. It was physical. It was emotional. It was demanding and draining. It was exhilerating and a gift. Yes, Nancy. "Getting to the top" ... is ... "mandatory." You have certainly risen to new heights by digging deep and thus finding your inner strengths. Let's do it again!
Thanks for taking me back to the Canyon.

July 13, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterLinda Dickson

The honesty in your story shows how humble and courageous you are. In the Grand Canyon you relied on your inner strength as well as assistance from others; your friend as well as strangers. Encountering the Diamondback rattlesnake in the woods proved to be exactly what you needed in order to create the necessary change to be successful with the bully. You had to skills buried deep inside, you just needed a reminder. You are an incredible woman who through your writing, gives hope to many of your readers, especially me. Keep writing and sharing!

July 15, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterJune Parnes

When Ann & I were at the Grand Canyon, I couldn't even get to the trail entrance my fear of heights is so great. I consistently stayed at least 10 - 15 feet back from the rim at all times. And that's after years of work on my acrophobia. (Driving over bridges used to be absolutely traumatic - for me, for my passengers, and most certainly, for the cars behind me!) So to be able to even enter the trail to begin with would have been a great victory for me. I see such things not so much in their emotional roots, but their physical manifestations. I'm quite tolerant of them - mine and others'. On the other hand, those deeper emotional fears you shared ... I have little patience for them. It is my first response to say, "Stop being so silly and get over it!" And when they rear their ugly little heads in my life, I find only the greatest impatience with myself. It is one thing to be defeated by a mountain - or a canyon - or a snake with capabilities greater than one's own, but to be defeated by oneself? It's unacceptable. Hmmm... maybe that's the key ... making the unacceptable acceptable. Very zen... As soon as we accept such fears - when we embrace them - we disable them. I'm just thinking out loud because to get too deep into your story is scarey as hell.

July 19, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterTed Wilson

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