Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Soul Focus

This past weekend I was fortunate enough to attend the 15th Annual Ouray Ice Festival. This was probably the 7th or 8th festival which I personally attended, and one that fell at an odd time in my life. I wrestled for weeks with the decision to go or not to go. To not go would mean I would work extra, save money, and maintain my little routine. To go would mean getting back in the saddle so to speak. It would mean 3 days to just climb and be around like minded souls. I could try and forget the past year and a half of my life abruptly interupted by a horrendous injury and then my divorce (an eternal injury). I could be with a group of friends who care about me and many of whom were right there in the firey pit of hell as I made this journey, or I could stay home and just go about my daily routine.

I had not been climbing much over the months prior to this wekeend, making the concious choice to stay grounded after several close calls over the last year. As I waded through the myriad of emotions that came with the loss of my wife, I found that I was suddenly willing to risk more. Less afraid of a loss that came prematurely and suddenly, unwanted and unkind. I have always been extremely cognizent of my climbing and the inherent risks. When I would find myself pushing the limits of my abilities all that I had to do to avoid the ever growing pull of gravity was to think of my wife and the terror of her answering the door to a sherrif or answering the phone to the voice of a friend telling her that I was gone. Of course I’ve always put that same fear first and foremost into thoughts of my children, but I just knew that I did not want to put that burden on my wife, who would in turn have to tell our children that dad was not coming home. So I’d get a gravity/reality check and “slow my roll”. Many would claim that it “held me back”. I beg to differ; it merely held me to a higher level of responsibility. The last year has been significantly different in this aspect. My wife was gone and slowly I was upping my game. I was re-learning to live again, to risk again, and to love again. My emotions were raw and real and I was unafraid after the loss I had just suffered. After all, what could be worse than losing all you cared about? So yes I pushed harder and it eventually caught up to me on one warm summer evening in September. I had decided to go climbing on the day that I had met my wife 16 years prior. While soloing (climbing unroped with no protection) a casual route that I had climbed before and felt entirely comfortable on, I slipped just above the crux move. The crux move, in climbing terminology, refers to the hardest move on a particular route. While this move was considred the crux move of this climb, it was well below the level I was climbing at. I slipped at the crux, lost my footing, and hung unroped from three fingers before quickly making a bumbling, desperate move back down to a small ledge. All of this happned approximately one hundred feet off of the ground.

This was a beautiful summer evening in Durango and the sunset as I sat there consumes my memory of that night to this day. I was shaking and crying. They were not tears of fear. They were tears for all I had lost and for the complete lack of fear that I had just come close to losing the ultimate gift..my life. My kid’s lives would have been altered once again, but this time to a point of no return. At that time I had no idea that in a matter of a few months I would be fighting for my God given right to just be their dad and spend equal amounts of time with them. That didn’t matter at this moment. I watched as cars silently passed by far below. Distant to the point of silence, yet so close. The sun slowly dipped behind the La Plata Mountains. The last bits of light stretching its luminous arms across the valley before me. A gentle alpenglow illuminating the town I came to love and call home. The pastures below were full of livestock completely oblivious to my battle with gravity. I remember watching a cyclist pass by and seeing his small headlamp piercing the dusk like a pinhole in the ensuing darkness. I was alone. More alone, in more ways, than I had ever been in this lifetime. I wasn’t scared, just lonely and cold. The dryness in my throat was tantamount to swallowing an entire bale of cotton. High above the valley, above the Animas River, unable to hear its flowing pulse, I sat and contemplated what had just happened. My head was burried in my knees as I sat upon this ledge and stared at the encroaching darkness. The last bits of pastel light exploding in the sky. My cheeks were soaked and caked in dirt and tears. I felt numb but unafraid. I was tired but I felt so alive. I was free. It was just me and the canvas before me. The wind was my companion and this small rock ledge my island. No one could take anything else away from me for this was my fortress. Suddenly I felt the life that had been taken away from me replaced by a sense of peace and gaiety. I sat for another hour composing my mind and freeing my soul. Letting it all go. Allowing my galloping pulse to slow to a normal rythhm. Then I slowly downclimbed to where I had left my rope, packed my gear, hiked to my truck and sat there and cracked open a beer. To say that it was the best tasting beer of my life would be a gross dishonor to the experience!

The months that followed saw me climbing less and less, focusing more on my other passion- fighting! Everyday was filled with a constant state of motion and emotion. To stop would only allow the deamons of my life to creep back into my mind. I had hired an attorney and that was his job, not mine. I was invited on small climbing trips, day trips, after work trips, and every other type of climbing trip there was. My friends had my back, and I knew that. Friends who I had been less than attentive to in the past were suddenly there in my face. Unwilling and unable to watch me spiral down. Unwilling to let me fall from the edge of my fortress, unwilling to watch me go it alone…solo. Yet I knew that I needed to keep my feet on the ground for awhile. My mind wandered, over the months, to a good friend who had lost his fight with gravity in November of 2006. It was a Saturday and he had JUST finalized a divorce that mimmicked mine in so many ways. He fought long and hard for what most would consider “fair” and equitable results. He was in Mexico climbing with friends, celebrating if you will, when he decided to solo a climb that had wrapped its fingers around his heart and mind. The climb was WELL within his abilities. This time he would not come home. The next day (Sunday) we got the news that they had found his body. His ex-wife no sooner left the funeral service and she was packed and on her way out of the state. Jimmy’s family has almost no contact with his little girl to this day.

I knew that I needed to be here for my kids. I knew that life had just BEGUN for me. The world before me was scary, yet full of excitement. I just needed to stay grounded, stay alive, feel alive. I needed to focus on the fighting, not just with my fists, but fighting the battles that lay before me. Ultimately it all worked out. December 9th 2009 is a day I will never forget. I was given my wings on that fateful day. Up to that point all that I could see was loss, yet on this day I was given the wings to fly to wherever I wanted to be. I felt like Michael the archangel. Ready to do battle, exalted and triumphant. I had been battle tested over the course of the preceding 8 months and I was ready to face all that stood in my way of a life full of happiness. I was now the master of my own destiny and the captain of my own soul. My mind and my heart were slowly turning back to the source which had fuled my soul for so many years- climbing and the ever present dance with gravity. The thoughts and memories of climbing needed to be sorted. I needed to put the good memories in the forefront of my mind. I needed to acknowledge some past memories that involved a past life, yet involved climbing, and let them go, for those memories were no longer good. Climbing was MY life and MY source and no one could take that from me. I would not allow my wings to be clipped by the ruthless intent of insanity.

Slowly my focus shifted. I will always have the dual love for both lives. Climbing and Fighting. I needed the balance of both in my life yet I felt the pull at my heels. The taunting of gravity constantly egging me on, whispering in my ear “come let’s dance”. I couldn’t ignore it, and I dare not avoid its embrace. It is who I am. Dancing this dance far above the ground, sometimes above the clouds. Delicate and timeless, once you taste it’s sweetness you cannot ignore its pull. I knew the Ice Fest was coming but was I ready to truly commit to this partner? Would I have the clarity to dance with the grace and spirit that is required? Mere days before we were to depart I began the bargaining within my mind. “Stay and work, save the money”. “Go and spread your wings”. Day in and day out I struggled. Most decisions that I make are made clearly, logically, and typically quickly, yet I could not decide to take the leap and get back in the saddle that I had so missed.

Ultimately I decided to go, with a little encouragement from those friends who stood by me all this time, Doug, Cody, Neal, Linda, Marcus and Tambri. The overwhelming sense of “you need this” was continually repeated. So off we went. Skipping the mundane details I’ll just say that the journey back (within those three days in Ouray) proved very surreal. The first time I was lowered (or rappelled – I don’t remember which) into that dark chasm carved by the Uncompahgre River, I didn’t get what I expected. I thought I would just be overjoyed and bursting with enthusiasm. Suddenly I was about eighty feet below everyone else. I was cold, alone, and it was very surreal, bathed in shadows. Down this far you get no sun. The noises above are muffled by the flow of the river. Everything echoes. The past year of my life echoed in my mind. Yet I climbed. Move by move, ice crunching under the thud of my cramponed boots. My ice tools pierced the hard ice and allowed my ascent. Shards of ice peppered my face. Slowly, gently I ascended. I truly felt the wings upon my back spread like those of an eagle. Freedom! The one word, the one thought, the one feeling that rode the wave of adrenaline from bottom to top. FREEDOM! No one can take that from us. You can enslave a man. You can beat him, insult him, and tear him down, but as long as he maintains hope, he has freedom. The hope for a better tomorrow continues to fuel my spirit and give me the drive to keep putting one boot in front of the other. The sounds, taste, and smells from this weekend will forever be etched in my heart. The friends who shared these days are friends for eternity. The laughs we shared (even at my expense- sharpie man) continually reverberate in my mind. My focus has returned and my eyes are fixed. The sole focus in my life is to find moments of happiness, back to back, as often as I can. More so – my sole focus is to cherish each day that I have with two kids who are the focus of my soul. Until you have something so precious ripped from your grasp – you cannot fathom the ensuing hell, yet with hope and a good set of wings, you can beat the odds and come back to a world full of light. I will surely face many more difficulties in this life, and some I shall lose, but I will never give up my freedom, never give up my wings.

27 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good stuff Jim. I love some of yoru descriptions. I wish you'd have posted pics of the sharpie mess.
Steve

Anonymous said...

have you ever considered a career in writing? well illuminated my old friend. :)

Anonymous said...

BY FAR THE BEST YOU HAVE EVER WRITTEN. Welcome to FREEDOM my dear friend. God you inspire the hell out of me.

Steve said...

That just took me away.
Steve

Sara said...

Jim,
You not only have a way with words, but a way with making people question their mere existence on this planet. You have a gift beyond just the simple things in this life. Your kids are a gift, your freedom is a gift, but your ability to use your words to describe your experiences is absolutely phenominal. You make me feel what you are saying and I want to be right there next to you experiencing these adventures in your life. I feel like I take so much for granted when I read your writing. You give me a dose of appreciation for this life I have been given. Thank you Jim.
Sara

SW said...

Right on, but you did not do justice to the "sharpie incident". I don't think I have laughed that hard in years. You are a good person Jim and loved by many.
Shannon

Anonymous said...

You have done it again. Another favorite here in the office. Thanks. Keep it up and keep putting that one foot in front of the other.

Anonymous said...

Beautifully written Jimbo. Your descriptive way just makes you feel like you are right there.

Sara said...

Great work Jim. I agree that it is your best piece yet. I love the fact that you can find positive all round you as well as lessons in the smallest of things. You really are on a journey that will take you to great places. Keep on keeping on.
Sara

Anonymous said...

Once again you have friends telling you how awesome your writing is, how it inspires them, and how it is publishable work. You still won't do it? You are building a base of fans who really just enjoy your writing and following the plight of a person who has been up, down, up, and down again. It is so refreshing to see someone actually write about this stuff when we are all faced with it in our lives, yet not many out there can write about it the way you do. You should really try and do more with it.
Diane

Bo Yates said...

I read your Ouray entry and have to say you are an amazing writer. You write from your heart and your soul. You make your reader feel you with every word and every description. It is truly inspiring. Thanks for sharing your heart and soul with me.

~Bo

Ashley said...

This is awesome Jim, thanks for sharing!
Ashley Cheatham

Jen said...

Another great piece of art, my friend. I really identified with the way you described your near fall. I have had several moments in my life like that, (usually traumatic, like when my mom was dealing with cancer) when I felt like I was standing still and the world was moving around me. You captured that perfectly. I loved when you said, "distant to the point of silence, yet so close." You have the gift of being able to place people within the scenes of your life. It is then that we can relate your experiences to our own. Glad you are spreading your wings again, Jim. Maybe we all need to be reminded of the importance of that.

Anonymous said...

Dad
Jim, it's good to see you "back in the saddle" again. It's funny, the last month or so I have been wondering if you had given up climbing for good. I hated to see you throw all of that experience away. I remember when you first started climbing I think at DynoRock (sp). I didn't care too much for the idea but I soon realized that you were set on a long affair with this adventure. I remember the first time you dragged us along to DynoRock and we got to see Kai climb for the first time. I think he was 3 years old or so. He put on his harness, walked around behind you and got a hand full of rosin from your bag, slapped his hands together leaving a cloud of dust, turned his Minnesota Vikings cap around backwards and headed up the wall. No fear whatsoever. I'll never forget. Then you went on to Summit Climbing Gym where you not only climbed but worked for several years. Then guidng almost every weekend and many trips to Colorado. I feared for your livelyhood but eventually gained a confidence that you were a MASTER at what you were doing. Then the move to Durango. No turning back from there. Even though we miss you and the kids and Peg too, you are where you need to be. I am happy that you have decided to get back to climbing, back to the one thing that has built up so very much self confidence in yourself. I was reading Country Magazine the other day and found a quote that fits you to a tee, this is you "What would life be if we had no courage ot attempt anything" - Vincent van Gough
We love you Jim
Mom and Dad

Anonymous said...

Jim's dad - Don't you worry for it is clear at this point that your son does not have a quittting bone in his body. The kid has endured again and again and again. We all got his back and he is shinning and rising to new heights. You raised a man that has the capacity to take such negative and turn it into such an enlightening experience for all around him.
Dan

Anonymous said...

WOW ! Niceness Jim. I love it. When are you going to quit your job, travel the world climbing, and write about it?
Stacey Alexson

Anonymous said...

The wordsmith strikes again. Thank you Mr. Meyer. I just want to go out and chase whatever dreams my little head has balled up inside.

Anonymous said...

Someday my friend, all that you feel you lost will simply be a stepping stone to the ultimate happiness for you. I know what it all meant to you and I have stood there and watched the emptiness in your eyes as the tears streamed down your face. It’s okay to feel that “distant to the point of silence, yet so close” (beautifully put by the way) with the one you lost. You have obviously dealt and are turning to new horizons and directions. You have touched so many through this process. Continue to be humble and accept what comes your way. I bet that someday you won’t see this last year as a loss but simply something you had to go through to find something else greater. Keep climbing and keep rockin’ on.
JW

Anonymous said...

Jim,
I’m astounded at this one. It made every emotion come out in me. I do want to tell you something that may seem mean. I’ll stay annonymous on this one because I do still love ALL four of you. My sadness is beyond describing still to this day. Even though we rarely ever talk about “this” travesty anymore, I see this sadness and utter devastation in your eyes. I come into your bar and see you laughing and smiling but the second I look into your eyes I see the heartbreak. You two were the superman and wonder woman of all couples. So here is where it goes to tough love; while my heart breaks everytime you and I talk, I have seen you become so much MORE than superman. You were always a great father the eyes of so many and you are repeatedly told so, but what you have become through this ordeal may have just made you better than superman. I don’t know what I’d call a super hero better than superman but you have become superdad. All the heartache falls away when I see you with Kai and Kealey and the way they are with you. Again- you were always close to them and them you, but it is different now. I have watched the way they talk to you, interact, play, etc, with you and it has GROWN Jim. All your readers see and say these good things about you and you turn around and humble us by pointing out that you are not perfect and are full of faults, but those kids are your biggest fans. So it may not seem like it now or maybe not anytime soon, but what happened to you did destroy you but you have come back better than EVER. That may or may not offer you some form of solice, but you really need to think about that. Maybe it is worth it. Most of us only dream of having the gift of expression that you have, and few of us ever become so close to our kids the way that you have become. The sadest part for me is the fact that Kai is of the age where this will have everlasting and PROFOUND affects on him. He’ll never get this out of his mind. It angers me that you two could not have found a way for that alone, but then there is little Kealey and she is so young and at the other end of the spectrum. How many of us remember being seven years old? Not many and those that do probably don’t remember a great deal. It makes my eyes well up just saying it, but she will likely never have the memories of the “family” you guys were. This is all she’ll ever know but in a sadder sense than Kai. At least he got to experience it. I just wish you guys could have worked it out.
So there it is my friend. I just wanted you to hear those things, good, bad, ugly, or indifferent, it is how I feel.

Anonymous said...

I'm with the previous commentor! You are great Jim but I do wish it could have workded for all of you. Keep moving forward and upward.
Stph

Anonymous said...

I have never seen anyone love so much as you, even when you were absolutely destroyed by someone. I have never seen anyone fight with more determination than you, and I have NEVER seen love in someone's eyes as I see when you look at your kids. I know you think you'll never love again like you love(d) her but it'll find you someday Jim. I just hope you will accept it.

Anne said...

Something you wrote once that I will never forget – “let no one stand by my grave when my time comes and say I did not live, that I did not try, or that I did not appreciate all that I was given. Let know one ever question that I loved with all that I am and all I will ever be, and let no one ever let my kids forget that they were loved with every ounce of my being”. Those words you wrote are as elequent as they come. Your struggles don’t go unnoticed and your trials unfelt. Your day will come only when God see’s fit. Until then you continue to fight and inspire. If you accomplish not an ounce more in this lifetime, you have touched others and you have touched the two children who you have been blessed with. You DO have a connection beyond what most of us can fathom! Your kids see right to the core of who you are. You are loved Meyer.
AW

KTC said...

Fantastic! While I don’t share your passion for climbing, I have passions of my own and this just makes me want to pursue them more and with more gusto. It is so refreshing to have a place to go to read such insightful stories and to feel like I am right there living vicariously through you. We have never met, now will we likely, but I have always dreamed of living in Colorado. This makes me want to move. I am sorry to have followed you through your grief but you have made me question so much in life. All of the simple things that I/we normally overlook seem so beautiful when you describe them and all of the trivial little things we worry about seem so small. Your journey is truly inspirational and full of hope.
Karen T. Collins / New York

Anonymous said...

Jimmy,
Today you confided in me something very deep. Something that has given you (if only momentarily) a great deal of peace and comfort. I wasn't nice about it and you were NOT very nice in your reply. I am sorry and when I go back and read through your blog over the last two years, I can see why you are willing to take the risk you are right now. Just keep your gaurd up.
SLT

Anonymous said...

Hi Jim,
It was nice meeting you at Ponga's. Your story touched my heart and you have got to be one of the kindest, most forgiving, real people I have ever met. I am grateful for us meeting and look forward to knowing you more.

Anonymous said...

You light up the world around you. You have changed so much from this and I am GLAD it happened because you are an amazing person, friend, father, companion, and spirit.
JH

Anonymous said...

You are the Snowdown King !!! You were so much fun this weekend. It is fun to watch you behind the bar. You had that crowd screaming and laughing. Keep up the flare.
Kendra