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snow

Rabbit Rabbit

By Uncategorized

Rabbit. Rabbit.

In college I went out with a girl who, on the first of each month, slid out of bed, stood straight up, said “Rabbit. Rabbit.” out loud and then flopped back on the bed with her arms outstretched. She believed if ‘rabbit rabbit’ was the first thing said in the month, you received good luck for the whole month.

In the years since, some months I manage and some months not.

Today, I rose and started toward the kitchen to make coffee. Remembering it was the first, I stopped, walked back to the bed, said “Rabbit. Rabbit”, and flopped back on the bed and wondering if this would be a month of good luck. In an elemental fashion, rabbit rabbit connects with luck and future good will with the same validity as a horoscope or a card reading.

I read a couple horoscopes every month. One detailed. One pretty fluffy.

I think of Laurie often. As we age, we wonder about the paths we take. Twenty years after graduating college, while helping my mother cook dinner, she looked at me and said, “I always wished you’d married Laurie.”

I laughed, and without thinking replied, “Me too.”

So March 2009 is a rabbit rabbit month

Our snow drought broke a few days ago. More is forecast. A pdf of the first pages of the book showed up in my email Friday. Registration for the Conference starts this week. All the stars seem aligned.

Rabbit. Rabbit.

I wonder how it will do?

A Writing Life-1

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A writing life-1

So I am stuck.

8 am on a cloudy half-snowy day. The streets melted yesterday and now are a sheet of ice under an overnight skiff of snow. Only a skiff. A tease. When we are looking, hoping for meters. The piece I am working on lacks a cohesive structure. A thread or theme. Yes, Angie, I look for themes, too.
It’s a ski piece on waiting for snow. Early season training. And waiting for the mountain to open. We’re a week late opening now as it is.

I take a shower. I set the dishes from the last day (or maybe two) in the sink in hot water and dish soap to soak. I make a cup of tea. I boil water in a small saucepan, add oatmeal, letting it cook. It’s unprocessed organic oatmeal. In ten minutes, I take it off, plop it into small bowl, slice off a slab of butter, drop in a spoonful of brown sugar and fill the bowl with milk. I think of cold days in Palo Alto (not so cold) when my mom would tell stories of growing up on the prairies of Saskatchewan (very cold) and how oatmeal kept them going on the short walk to school. How they always put in butter, real butter. How we always had butter. Real butter, because my grandfather owned a creamery.

I think back to the early days of skiing as a child. Foggy days with streetlight only half visible in the still dark mornings as we leave to drive into the Sierras. Waking hours later on Donner Summit with the snow sheds covering the railroad tracks across the valley, granite walls and a blue bird Sierra sky. To ski for the weekend.

And I find my link. My theme. The preparations of those days. The wait and the first day on the mountain.

Edge of the Void

By Blog, Uncategorized

On the Edge of the Void.

(This piece appeared in the Feb. Fernie Fix)

On the afternoon of December 14th, Cory Brettman rode the Silver Queen Gondola rising out of the town of Aspen 3,267 feet to the summit of Ajax Mountain. At the top, he skied off to skier’s right, passed through a ski area boundary gate and entered the Richmond Ridge “side-country” of Ajax Mountain.
With the advent of open gates on ski areas, there is an in-between zone that has become known as the “side-country”. Not true backcountry, side-country is frequently skied terrain close to the ski area. Not patrolled or controlled, side-country is the casual backcountry.
Cory and I go way back. For years we lived in Breckenridge where he skied on pro-patrol and eventually became one of the top snow control folks on the mountain. He skis like a panther. Smooth. Strong. Nothing seems to faze him. Terrain. Conditions. Visibility. He simply skis.
On off-days we climbed. A lot of ice and a bit of rock. One Fall he went down to the Yosenite Valley returning with a string of great climbs and even better stories. Close to twenty years ago, he moved from Breckenridge to Aspen where he carried on as pro patrol and continued snow safety work.

We live on the edge of a void. Hold your finger and thumb together, just touching. Hold them in front of you. That is the distance between this life and the void beyond.
What you believe doesn’t matter. A life after death. Heaven. Hell. Nothing at all. Or a reincarnation reflecting your acquired karma in this incarnation. On the other side lies a void.

Our valley gazed into the void this week with the death of eight snowmobilers. An avalanche buried three of a party of seven. Two were quickly pulled out and all turned to working to extract the last buried member of their party. Soon joined by four more, they worked feverishly together to rescue the last man. Another avalanche dropped off the mountain and buried the entire group. All of them. One man managed to break free. He uncovered another lying close to the surface. Together they found a third man and started to uncover him. Another avalanche roars off the mountain, they run for their lives leaving the half uncovered friend pleading, “Don’t leave me”. He is buried a third time. They rush back, unbury him completely and help him to the surface of the snow.
In a quick search, the sole transceiver they locate is the signal from the last man still buried in the first avalanche, now covered by a second and a third. They leave believing the area too dangerous to stay while hoping a GPS 911 signal has been received by the outside world.
As they reach the edge of the bowl, the whole middle of the mountain’s face lets loose and roars down running across the area where only minutes before they stood. As they watch, where they had been standing, and the snow under which their friends lie, is buried once again. This time by a wall of running snow 15 feet high and half a kilometer wide moving at maybe 90 kilometers an hour. Turning again, they continue walking down the very track they rode in on not so very long ago. Maybe 30 or 40 minutes earlier.
Their lives. The lives of every person in the valley changed in one way or another. Husbands killed. Father and son killed. Brothers killed. Buried. In a moment. Helping. One still buried and 10 trying to get him out. Eleven buried. Two get out. One partially uncovered and then buried again. He is finally pulled out. The three walk away.
They have stood at the edge of the void. The point there the thumb and the forefinger touch. The point where there is no space, none, between life and death.
And they walked.

Cory dropped into a little chute called Powerline.
At eight that night concerned friends called search and rescue. He’d not showed up for dinner as planned. The Aspen Ski Patrol found Cory, one of their own, a little after nine. The slide was small. Only three feet at the fracture and dropped a couple hundred feet. It threw him into some trees and buried him. One ski broke the surface of the disturbed snow and he was found by probing close by. He was skiing alone without a transceiver, probe or shovel. Just dropping in for a quick shot.
He left a wife of almost two decades, a five and an eight-year-old daughter. And changed the meaning of December 14th for a host of us forever.
Over the years, maybe Cory skied that little side-country chute a thousand, two thousand times? I have the same favorite duck-into spots. A host of them in Breckenridge. And several here newly found in my few years on this mountain.
Familiarity. Complacency. Comfortable. Easy.

We forget the distance between the thumb and the forefinger, just touching, at the very edge of our vision.
I already have a reason to remember December 14th. My daughter’s birthday. Now I have another reason to remember that day. As we age, individual dates stack up like books across a shelf with remembered lives. Some still here and some gone. All mixed up.
The platitude “They died doing what they loved” is only that, a platitude. Trite. Meaningless. It speaks nothing to the life that was lived, the life lost and the lives left behind now moving on alone.
Waking, we start the next day, wondering “Why them?”
And me?
On December 14th Cory dropped into a chute on Aspen Mountain. On December 26th, I became the oldest living member, the oldest male, on one side of my family. On December 28th eleven men rode into an alpine bowl and forty-five traumatic minutes later three walked out.
We live on the edge of the void.