I've Always Wanted To. . .
Try Rock Climbing
Shut Up and Climb
There was a rock climbing gym in San Francisco. All the bad
asses went there to climb and people around town would smugly say, “yeah man I
climb, do you?” It was a status symbol. If you left chalk covered and sweaty
you were one of the cool kids with the insane back muscles. I went there for
yoga and would longingly look at the climbers wishing I could join them but too
intimidated to try. It felt like stepping out on a dance floor full of
professionals, watching them with admiration from afar but convinced you could
never be one of them.
Rock climbing has long been on my list of things I’ve always
wanted to do. This time, with determination, a friend and I waltzed into a
local climbing gym with our game time faces on.
I started taking off my flip-flops to put on the climbing
shoes. Our instructor, Ben, looked at me in surprise and disgust saying, “you
don’t have any socks?” Suddenly, I remembered what a climber friend said about
rental shoes- they are “totally foul, nasty and smell terrible, you don’t want
to put those things on, buy some if you ever climb.” Whoops, good advice not
taken.
My feet have a tendency to sweat and by association, to
smell as most feet do. Oh great I thought, if the shoes don’t reek now, they definitely
will when I’m done with them. I looked up at Ben’s question in horror. “It’s ok
you don’t have to wear socks but…” he trailed off as I completed his sentence
in my head, “but that’s really nasty and I wouldn’t do it if I were you.”
Our instructor walked us over to the rock wall—level 1-- a
5.5 wall- as easy peasy as they get- but somehow it still looked a little
freaky. Looking around me I noticed we were the only women there. As with REI or
weight lifting rooms this was a total men den but I was determined to elbow my
way in like a girl craving a drink at a crowded bar.
I had never learned how to belay, or man the ropes for
another climber from the ground, but I climbed once as a kid. I was up Ben said,
the guinnea pig first climber with my friend on the ground manning the ropes. I
started climbing- it was easy enough and I shot up pretty fast. At the top I
looked down at my friend below to make sure she had my back and was ready for
me to fall, at which time I was supposed to yell, “catch” to be sure.
You know how people say never look down? Well, there’s a
reason for that, what wasn’t scary on the ground floor can be pretty scary from
up high.
I’m not a huge fan of heights, that fact somehow slipped my
mind when I decided to do this. I’m not deathly afraid, as in I won’t get on an
airplane but if I were on top of the Empire State Building I probably wouldn’t
go anywhere near the edge.
As a kid, I refused to walk across this big metal cat
walk/bridge across a canyon, which at the age of eight might as well have been
the Grand Canyon. My parents had to coax me the whole way across. It was metal
and when you looked down it was like seeing through a grate- you could see
everything below. I remember freezing mid-way across and refusing to go any
further. I stood frozen and, as I do when I reach a point of supreme
frustration and fear, I started crying and protesting my ability to do it. Holding
on to the rail in the middle of this bridge I was afraid to go back and afraid
to go forward, instead I just stood there and had a melt down.
Now at the top of my climb looking down, I thought, I don’t know if I can do this, what was I
thinking! Given that my friend had just learned how to use the belay to
lower me down, I was a little freaked out to sit back in my harness and push
off the wall and trust that she had me- even if Ben was standing right next to
her. It reminded me of those trust games they make you play as a kid, you know,
lean back as though you are falling and trust that the person behind you will
catch you. Man I hated that game!
“Catch!” I yelled. “Ok,” she called back. Deep breath. I
leaned back sitting into the harness and pushed off the wall in one insanely
trusting leap of faith. She had me. I was fine. I didn’t go careening downward
to my death. We switched, my friend climbed up the wall and came down with me slowly
lowering her down. Ben said, “Don’t let the ropes get twisted,” and took off
leaving us to climb.
“That’s it!” I thought. Seriously? Once up and down and we’re
cleared to climb alone? I looked over at my friend. She had an unphased grin
from ear to ear. I felt panicky like a deer in the headlights thinking what if I fall and she handles the ropes
wrong or I handle it wrong?- a less than 10-minute instruction and we’re now
expected to entrust our lives into each other’s very novice hands? You crazy?
Ben walked back to the front desk as I look concernedly after him. My friend
nonchalantly said, “cool, come on!”
Turns out we were fine. A little clumsy at first maybe but
never unsafe. We went from 5.5 to 5.8 in one hour- taking turns climbing
different walls. I’d reach a point in the wall and get stuck but giving up was
not an option. I’d push up with my legs and reach a little further with my arms
and take more risks- sure I might fall but I knew my friend had my back and
when I got stuck I’d pause, survey my options and then make a move- it was kind
of like life really.
Each wall I climbed I climbed better and faster and each
time I reached the top of a climb it was like conquering my own doubt in myself
that I couldn’t do it. When I sat back in my harness, making my way down after
having reached the top- I realized that I could
do it and what’s more I did do
it!
Both of us left that day proud, and with a sense of
empowerment. It may have been a men den but my friend and I lived up to the
quote at the entrance, “Shut up and climb!”
I thought briefly about my first rock climbing experience at
a gym in San Francisco- how clumsy and insecure I felt then- how timid and
embarrassed to even try climbing- like all eyes were upon me laughing at how
bad I was, I had little faith in what I was capable of then. What a different
person I am now. I didn’t believe I could do it then, I never even had the
courage to get up to bat really but now I know I can do it and even if I can’t
the real difference is that I’m no longer afraid to fall trying.


