I decided I
had enough. I was roughly 70 feet above
the deck, maybe another 20 feet shy of my partner belaying me off the GT ledge,
but I wasn’t going any further. A few
moves below my current position the thought of wanting to come down entered my
mind. Not fearful of falling (I have
complete trust in my partner and his skills) and not because I felt the climb
was too difficult either. All I did was
look up. I saw what looked like miles of
vertical rock and a wide open sky and said to myself, “nah, I think I’ll
pass”. I wasn’t in a tailspin of
hysterical panic; I just didn’t want to go any higher.
That was
Pitch 1 of Easy-V (5.3), a popular beginner lead climb found on the Arrow Wall
in The Gunks. I lowered off not feeling
defeated nor was my desire to climb deflated, but I felt like I needed a few minutes to
get my head in the game. Today is my
second day on rock this year. A few
weeks back I’m top-roping 30 feet off the ground and today I’m looking at 100
foot plus climbs with exposure. I’m
trying to adjust my mental altimeter as well as differentiate irrational fear from
mental discomfort. My partners, John and
Ryan, have just rapped back down and the rope is threaded through the bolted
anchors just above the first pitch of Arrow, 5.8 (pitch 1 is rated around
5.6). I waste no time in getting back on
the rock and manage to work through my anxiety and climb. I get through it, and I'm already feeling better.
Easy V follows crack on right, Arrow route on rock face above the short tree on left |
Following 2nd Pitch of Northern Pillar |
John belaying from the top of Northern Pillar |
But sadly, this
was where our day ended. On the drive up
it had been pouring rain and the forecast was calling for showers throughout
the day. When John and I got to the
Gunks the rain had stopped and the rock was dry. After climbing Arrow we felt a few drops on
our walk over to Northern Pillar. And it
was just as Ryan finished Pitch 2 did the rain begin falling again. Rappelling down the face my shoes slid off
the rock as if it were ice. Ryan had
said Gunks rock becomes extremely slippery when wet and we all agreed that climbing
in these conditions is out of the question.
One thing I had been fearing leading up to this day (besides heights)
was the chance it would be ruined by rain.
A few days prior, the forecast was calling for sunshine and all three of
us had confirmed the day would be a go.
But the day before the chance of rain had increased from 10 to 50
percent and all we could do was hope to spared or that it would only be a
slight passing shower.
Rappelling off of Northern Pillar as the rain falls |
One of the
reasons I decided to try rock climbing a few years ago was because of my fear
of heights and wanting to conquer that fear.
Along with the physical demands of climbing rock, there’s also the
technical aspect of safety and if you throw in a fear of heights you got
yourself quite a cocktail of challenges to overcome. Fear is ok.
Fear keeps you modest. But when
fear turns to panic and panic becomes a distraction your performance is
affected. And in climbing performance is
not just about climbing, it’s also about safety. I know my limitations and have no desire to
push myself in situations where I could compromise my safety. However, in order to grow as a climber, and a
person you do need to face your fears and find the strength overcome them. While I haven’t quite defeated my fear of
heights (and I may never get over heights) I decided not to let my emotions
inhibit me. And I learned that for next time I all I got to do is a
say a little prayer, keep calm, and climb on.
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