While I was on the road recently I met an artist whose
favorite muse was the naked body. I was intrigued, first,
because she was a beautiful thirty-something woman, from Aspen of all places, but
on a deeper level it made me ponder why. I’ve later thought about how writers
get naked.
I left on this road
trip not wanting to leave. I was on a roll. I was in the zone writing, and working
a bunch at my night job. Saving my pennies, something I’ve never been too good
at. But, I’d planned to do some book readings, and hoped to squeeze in some
climbing too. It was too late to bail. So off I went, out of my comfort zone of
home, onto the road.
I was rolling solo but
there’s this buddy of mine that always comes with, my ego. This jabbering
monkey is always whispering sweet nothings of how great I am, or breaking down
and telling me I’ll never make it. Both are voices of delusion.
My first presentation
in Fort Collins was a bust. Four people showed up. I read from my book anyways,
trying to hide my disappointment. I’d driven eight hours that day and only
ended up selling one book.
The next day was windy
and cold and I drove down to Golden to meet my friend Alexis for breakfast. A
brilliant and talented artist who recently relocated to the Front Range from
Durango, Alexis moved there just before the big flood hit. The flood caused all
sorts of complications for her living situation, and now just a couple months
after moving into a new place, she already had to relocate. She told her story
as a metaphor; she had a positive attitude, the struggle being the blessing.
I was frustrated and
flustered, cities always make me flustered. Already I wanted to be back home. In
that diner there was a part of home, a true friend, willing to bend her ear,
and tell me the words I needed to hear to continue living the dream. “Someday
you’ll look back and miss these days,” she said.
With a cup of warm tea
my heart and spirit warmed up and I hustled the streets of Golden and Boulder,
going into gearshops and selling a few books and zines. The dream alive for
another day, then it was back on the road.
The road ultimately
led to the red rock desert, where my dreams are always reborn. When success
eludes me, love fails, or I’m searching for answers the desert provides. I’ve
been on a six-month hiatus without much difficult climbing, a result of an
injured finger. During this time there’s been more questions than answers,
accidents in our climbing community resulting in some serious injuries, I
watched a dead body get plucked off El Capitan in Yosemite, and had another
friend die in a climbing accident. Wondering, will I continue on this path?
Castle Valley answers.
Perfect towers up to four hundred feet tall, castles made of sand, some divine
force that sculpted something so perfect I can’t help but be drawn towards
them. I join my climbing partner there and we lay out camp. Home.
My mood changes, and I
think differently. I’m no longer concerned with money, progress or success; I
am in the desert to reconcile with climbing. My energy to climb builds until I
can’t contain it, then every fiber of my being is engaged in the fight. I dress
my body for the battle. Pants, a long sleeve shirt, taped hands and hardware to
protect the crack. My climbing partner smokes cigarettes. I hate cigarettes. It’s
like the old west, something raw, exposed in the elements of the desert, seeing
what surfaces.
I can’t back down from the battle. I squeeze my body into the crack, inching upwards for progress. Then it swallows me, I sink down in fear. What the fuck am I doing? If I fall here its all over… I get it together and continue to inch up. Finally, I reach the top of the pitch. I look down to my knot and the rope is nearly sliced in half. Despair. My partner joins me on the ledge. We bail, the rest of the climb will wait for another day, month or year. Then the ropes get stuck after we rappel. We must return the following day.
We return, against our
own will, but for the better good of our souls. One point in the climb involves
a true leap of faith. Chimney-ing between two walls of the rock, it widens.
There must be a commitment to step across the void to some half-inch edges.
Complete and utter focus and surrender. We succeed, on the top, the summit, the
red rock towers lead into snow capped mountains, into the blue sky.
That feeling is back.
Mastery over the doubt that is always creeping up. Adrenaline. Feeling I’ve
fought another day and emerged victorious.
We go into Moab. The
land of warm beer. Perhaps Colorado should liberate Utah from its Mormon
Stronghold and absurd laws. I love the desert, but the Mormon culture that
surrounds it freaks me out. Time to drive back towards that “Welcome to
Colorful Colorado” sign, and be home again.
First I return to the
Front Range again for another presentation. It’s in Longmont, I traverse the
interstate back to where my travels began. Not a single person shows up for the
presentation. I manage to sell one book to a guy who climbed once. He tells me
his story, and describes a glorious peanut butter and jelly sandwich, with legs
dangling above the void. Sounds about right.
“There’s no success
like failure, and failures no success at all,” Dylan said it best. The things
that made me feel good are not measurable in the context of society. Thinking
that pouring my heart and soul into words to become successful is simply
delusional. Success and money won’t make me happy. Give me more struggle,
aching muscles, and glorious, meaningless victories. Let me stand naked with my
words, knowing I’m crafting my art because I love it, and for no other reason.
And, when it’s time, take me back to the desert.