I Am So Nothing

in mountains •  7 years ago 

I prefer to write in fiction, and there is a huge difference between the structure and intent of story telling, and the flow and purging in my early morning musings and poetry, which I primarily keep to myself. I was inspired this morning, however, with a collision of forces, and so this humble little piece was born, and I hope it keeps to its more whimsical birth while telling a true story that mirrors certain things...harmonies and conflicts, if you will...that are currently confronting themselves within me.

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I just got back into the tiny city. It's a pretty little town, but it isn't the mountains, and it isn't even a full grown city yet. It sits at the bottom of a bowl of tall hills and ridges, with a sleepy, subdued river running through the middle of it in a broad, sweeping, and somehow, very pleasing curve.

I've been in the Copper Basin playing on wild rivers, and the city - even as small as it is - is somehow an abhorrent paradox, or contrast, to my present state of mind. Thank God it isn't a big city...

A few years ago, I met a woman from London. She was beautiful. A bolt of lightning. I liked a lot of the London that she wore, and there was a lot of the London on her that I didn't like. But she was a powerhouse of a woman, and I admired her immensely. We spent two weeks together in the States having a grand adventure all across the southern Appalachian Mountains.

Several years before that, I was lucky enough to witness the collision of two powerful storm cells while standing on the peak of the oldest mountain in the world. Great giants of clouds colliding with other giants. Lightning striking everywhere. Twisting and mating and folding into each other, these storms quarreled and made love...consuming and being consumed in gorgeous, breathtaking violence. I felt the fear that I could die at any moment, and it was mirrored by the way I couldn't catch my breath in the raging winds and pushy, cold gusts. It invoked a panic that stemmed from the minefields of my past. Helpless. Blown up. With mortars and artillery exploding - missing their target - all around me for hours. I thought that one day I could describe a fear like that - that is, once I had lived long enough to have a proper view of the horizons - but I now believe that you just can't describe it in words at all. You have to live it...and I would much rather we not. As I came to grips with these old fears, in a very similar way as that moment from my past, I was astounded by the power and the beauty. I can't really describe that either.

I was all alone up on that peak. The trails had cleared out ahead of the storm, but they are never crowded anyway. That's what I like most about the cities, these factory farms for commodified people. Making value out of nothing. People in cities seem too distracted to be bothered with reality. The city's "Real World" is an imaginary tea party with costumes. So many costumes that there are even costumes for riding bicycles. In cities, people would rather fight over balls in stadiums than venture into the world that sustains the poison factories of people, wastes seeping into the contaminated rivers...into the poisoned oceans.

So the trails stay relatively unused and uncrowded. And I love that!

In that way, I can easily stomach the tourists when I'm working...guiding whitewater rivers...and happily share. And I hope that when they go home, because they can not stay, they will make some art. I hope that they are that moved - by the river, in the way she moves me, not by me - when they return home to these cities, where wars are born and planned...so moved that they make art. Or live artfully. Because great art is really nothing more than attempts to express the archetypes found in nature - in the really real world - that can't exist in an imaginary tea party city, lit in artificial light.

We've covered up this world, peopling so much expanse and vastness. But standing on that mountain, I didn't see any museums. No. Why would you? That mountain is living art, and there is nothing you can build, nothing you can say, that wouldn't be embarrassing next to the magnificence of that stoic, ancient creature. No expression that can compare to the towering view of folds of earth rising up and radiating out into so many other worlds far below.

I am so nothing.

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And all that what you describe is only on this small piece of rock and water that we call Earth, floating around in a universe that is so large, that we can't even grasp it. We, our earth, and all our great monuments are less than nothing compared to the vastness, power and beauty of this universe.

Oh, for certain! Yet we are compelled, and should we rise to the occasions, we can find galaxies of understanding that fit within ourselves at each stirring of the heart. Deepening connection on the heels of disconnecting. Going in when we go up. And out when we go back down. Unconditional worth in that which is ourselves. Unending mystery ahead of the steps of each person that moves us. There seems to be a universe wrapped up within the tiniest speck of dust. Excitement at will. Magic in the mundane. Synchronicity and simple math. If gratitude is a formula that changes the world, thank you.

Great post! There is something deep deep within my soul that longs to be on or near a mountain. Every climbing experience I've had have been some of my fondest memories. I remember the feeling of awesome terror I felt while on a 14,000 ft mountain in colorado watching storm clouds black as the mouth of satan approach in the distance, but gracefully never pass over us.

Thank you!

"Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountain is going home; that wildness is necessity; that mountain parks and reservations are useful not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers, but as fountains of life." -John Muir

I agree about that fountain of life thing. Thanks for a great comment on my post, friend. I'm going to have to keep an eye on your blog.

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Excellent prose my brother @joenorwood, very good description of the collision of storm fronts, I imagine that were two types of fronts one cold and the other warm to collide in that way. Thus showing a part of the true strength of nature, you were privileged to witness it. @renny-krieger

Thank you. I agree, it was a privilege. I've never had an experience quite like it since then.

Thanks @joenorwood!

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Thanks again Joe!

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Thank you!

great post - this reminds me of all the things I can physically no longer do. I experienced some of it while living in Canada for the past 40 years - wild water rafting is something I wanted to do (Fraser River, BC) but never really did .... opportunities lost. Now I take walks in the parks of Vienna, Austria, and reminiscing about climbing the Bearhump in Waterton Lakes National park, with my infant son strapped to my chest. I am a city boy, but my longing was always for the mountains.

Kind sir,

If you can get to the river, I can get you down every wet, rejuvenating inch of it. I may not be able to do much of anything else, but I can put you in places where the river is her chattiest, and bring you back, safe but different. More smiley than before.