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Living the Nomadic Life - Tips and Tidbits
2 weeks ago · 2 comments
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Living the Nomadic Life - Tips and Tidbits
For me, it was the beginning of a sad decline in my climbing. It took years to get that image out of my mind when I was climbing or cleaning a route. I vowed that I would take a NOLS wilderness first aid class to be more prepared and empowered if I ever encountered something like this again, but I have yet to do that. :(
I think it's a reminder of the seriousness of our sport, and the rules that we use in our safety system. All accidents reinforce the importance of every detail in our system, and if we take it to heart, we become better climbers for it.
I hope you can feel better about what happened, in time.
Love, Vanessa
I know you're out of town, but if you need to talk/vent/decompress, let me know.
my heart is hurting to read this, i am so sorry, and i am thinking of you. if you need to talk, please give me a call. i can't imagine how difficult that this is, and i hope that you have some support there in the red. have you decided whether to continue the trip? regardless, there are people who love and support you all over, so please know that. most of us who have climbed for a while, sadly have been involved in, witnessed, or been affected by an accident- it is a terrible part of this beautiful lifestyle that we love so much.
thinking of you, and sending you much love and positive energy.
ml
I feel bad for both of you. What an unfortunate accident. From all I've heard and seen, you have very good communication skills. Don't beat yourself up too bad and get back up on that horse. Take it as a hard lesson learned and try to move on. Go to Buffalo Trace and take their distillery tour (might help clear the mind, in one way or the other).
Here's to healing, both physically and mentally!
Cheers,
-Brian in SLC
my thoughts are with you. Be strong and far sighted - maybe be strong enough to be fragile too. I've spent a lifetime in the mountains, and these things happen. The trick is in how you perceive things and the process of coming to terms with the other side of what we do.
Cheers
Donald
Always,
adumb
Best.
Rachel
How are you doing? I sat here for a few minutes contemplating something to say. What do you say at these times other than we're here for you, ever from afar.