Sunday, October 21, 2007
How did this mountain get so high?
We made it back up to the mountain this morning for a quick ski. T skied from the car across the snow park and about 20 m down the trail. Not far, probably 100m total, but the farthest she's gone yet. Better, she seemed pretty excited. Well, not excited, but focused and happy. When she fell, she figured out how to untangle skis and self. When her skis crossed, she got them uncrossed (not on the first try, but without frustration). I like watching her hit these problems. She has an uncanny amount of patience with a problem for a 2.5 yr old. I try not to fix everything for her when we first start out because I don't want to cheat her of a challenge. Later because I want to see what she'll come up with next. Still later it's because I just can't believe she's still going at it. By the time she says, "I need some help", I feel I'm about to burst.
She's better than most people I've seen on their first cross-country outings, and better than myself on most days, in most situations.
After she started to get tired, I talked her into skiing to a little fallen branch, we had some chocolate. This was almost an out-of-body experience for me, because I remember so many time my dad would talk me into going just a bit farther before sitting down, and then the chocolate would come out. The role reversal was sharp enough to give me double vision- me and dad, me as dad.
After a section of Tobblerone, we popped T into a backpack, and K figured out how to strap T's skiis to the pack, and we dropped down into a little valley trail. T always wants to go faster- this is a real problem with having her go with LJ our first time out. But LJ doesn't crash, and my crashes were the things of song and story. Now, with T strapped to me, I've become so cautious. Children make you old. It's odd to worry about wadding after so many years of not caring- I used to figure that breaking stuff was bad, because things (skis, derailleurs, surfboards) cost money, but the body heals for free. But the last couple times I've tested my body's healing powers, I've not been keen on the rate or the quality of the healing. I worry that this new caution will become habitual, and that by the time she's ready to throw herself at the world, I'll have forgotten how.
We made it to the bottom of the trail, and while K and I were putting skins on, and T was discovering the magic of peeing in snow, a string of cowboys came up the trail looking for a missing bull. It made T's day; the smell of old hay, sound of heavy, sealion-like breathing, and the squeaking of heavy leather- all the things that go with horses. And the guys- leather chaps, grey walrus moustaches, big felt hats- T's eyes were like dinner plates. Nice little surprise meeting.
Almost back to the trailhead, there's a section of trail where the trees open up, and one faces right up the summit of Mt. Hood. I was pointing out bits of geology for T with my skipole, more of a running commentary for her distraction than for pedagogical purposes, and she says, "Let's climb it!". So I do the whole explanation of perspective - that things can look close when they're close, or when they're surprisingly large, and here we're sort of functionally more in the second case. So T mulls this over and says, "When I'm older, older, can we climb it?"
Hell yes.
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2 comments:
I've discovered the difinitive line you cross to become an adult: you don't like the snow anymore. It's snowing here, and I'm not excited about snow days (adults don't get snow days) or skiing, or the beauty the ice crystals make on the delicate ends of the bare aspens. I hate the drive and the traffic and leaving an extra 20 minutes early for work because I'll be going 15mph slower. I hate the noise the studded tires make on the road (is AK the only state where you can drive with studded tires from Oct-May? It's the only one I can think of that allows that). I hate it that I can't run in the winter because it's so dark in the morning and the sidewalks are icy and the trails are too deep. I hate it that I can't bike because the shoulders are full of snow and besides, cars are slipping everywhere and if I had an accident I don't have insurance. I hate standing call because the windshield is covered with snow and there's ice on the inside of the car at 2am. I am not even excited about going to the ski trails because I'd have to drive there and the last thing I want to do on my weekend is get in that damn vehicle.
To the pre-adult me, these would not be issues. In fact, I couldn't even explain it to 13 y/o me because it would be like speaking in a different language. The adult me just can't wait until May. If I survive that long.
What do all these words mean? It's like I don't know you anymore...
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