Over the past several months I've been spending a lot of
time rock climbing, and if I’m not actually climbing chances are pretty good I’m
thinking about it. Climbing happened to come back into my life when I seemed to
have needed it most. I’d started climbing when I was much younger but because
of location, convenience, and lack of climbing buddies it never stuck… until
now.
I’ve always had an affinity for any body of water, particularly
the ocean, because it’s safe to me. I’d learned a lot from it about the
confusions of life and the ocean has come to be a place I am comfortably wary
of.
It turns out that rock has had just as many lessons to teach
me about myself.
I thought I would share a few thoughts about this healing
process climbing has taken me on. To start, I should give a little bit of
background information for those who aren’t familiar with any of the
terminology (as I was personally clueless when I picked it back up). I won’t go
into much detail, but bouldering is a type of climbing that you don’t wear a
harness and you aren’t attached to anything while climbing. When you fall you
simply drop to the ground. Top roping is when the rope is anchored around
something at the top of the route, and you have a harness and you tie into the
rope at the bottom and climb the route to the top. At this point you lean back
and your belayer on the ground lowers you down. If you slip off the rock
at any point during this type of climb chances are you will be able to cling to
the rock again and keep climbing and attempting the route as long as your
belayer doesn’t get too tired. I won’t get into much else, other than to
explain that routes for bouldering and top roping each have different types of
rating systems and routes are set up in gyms based on difficulty. Essentially,
you follow a color of tape up the rock and only certain holds will be a part of
the route based on how hard it is.
The first weekend I got back into climbing I went with some
friends who had invited me to go outside on real rock. I’d never climbed
outside of a gym, but I had always wanted to. And that little taste of the feel
of the rock underneath my hands was about all it took for me to be hooked.
After that I spent time back in the gym working on one particular route and I
remember being particularly frustrated and absolutely loving it. My brain hurt
from trying to figure out how to arrange my body to finish the route, and my
pride hurt from realizing how terrified I was of committing to performing some
moves at the risk of falling. It was for this reason that I quickly took to
bouldering. I found that I needed to learn to trust myself again before I could
learn to trust others. It wasn’t until one friend was watching me as I climbed
and he simply said that I needed to commit to going for the next hold, at which
point it clicked for me and I distinctly remember tearing my attention away
from the rock long enough to say, “Yeah, well I have commitment issues.”
Without missing a beat he said, “Then this is a good place to work that out.”
It was only in the following months that I realized how true this statement was and I realized that for the time being the rock was going to
teach me more about myself than I was going to learn anywhere else.
I quickly discovered something as I was bouldering. I was
inside my own head and people could point out things and give me advice about
hand and foot placements, but until I worked it out with myself it just wasn’t
going to happen. Of course much of my inability when I first started was a lack
of upper body strength. My hands weren’t used to the roughness of the holds, my
fingers weren’t used to being tightly curled around rough objects, my arms were
demanding to know why I was demanding so much from them, and my legs were
quietly whimpering as they realized they were going to take a bit of a
backseat for a while.
I am weak. And I don’t just mean this in the physical
sense. I have gotten physically stronger, but I remain weak and incapable.
Without the constant presence of Christ the best I can do on one of my most put
together days is a synchronized flailing of my arms. Along this journey I found
that something I had told myself for months was actually true. As much as I
know I am weak on my own, I discovered that I’m also stronger than I thought
when I actually step aside and let Christ in. It's even better when I stop
fighting and I become an active participant in choosing which route I’m going
to tackle and what hand holds I’ll try for. When I would be hanging on a bouldering
route I would get stuck with my hands on a couple of holds looking toward the
next handhold that I had to reach for and after judging the distance to be too great I would freeze in thought. And fear. I would attempt the
route again and again and found I kept getting stuck in one part and was
having trouble making the move to the next hold. Eventually, after much
struggling on my part I realized that the longer I stayed in one place staring
at the next move the more tired I became and therefore the less likely I would
be able to pull off the move when I finally convinced myself to lunge for it. Exasperated, I finally resorted to what I know best. I decided
to approach this dilemma reasonably. It was time to start trusting myself,
reaching for the next hold, and accepting that the more I committed to the move
the more likely I was to succeed. Sometimes it is simply of no use to commit
half-way. What's more, to hang on and wait for the perfect timing just made me
weaker. I learned that not only could I start to trust myself again, but that if
I fell it didn’t mean I should question whether I'd made the right decision in moving forward.
And then I started to start to enjoy top roping again. My
first attempt at a route climbing outside I had someone belaying me that I
trusted without hesitation. I was terribly out of shape and yet the supportive
group of friends encouraged me as I faced the rock. And this was the end result
The first time I finished climbing again I remember being
physically and emotionally exhausted, my hands were raw, and I was grinning…
uncontrollably. And this is how it’s gone ever since.
The rock continues to beckon me and I continue to answer.
It's been fun to go climbing with friends who watched me as I first started climbing and haven't seen me climb since. They comment about how much stronger I've gotten. And I smile simply because the improvement of physical strength is only part of a much larger story. I've become a stronger person. I have again started to trust myself, and I know with work the rest will come. It's a journey. After all, there's no sense in worrying about the next hold before I've even started the route...
