Saturday, November 29, 2008

Pure, Simple Joy


Many times in life, it seems, the true enjoyment and appreciation of a thing only comes when it's over...when it has been accomplished or completed. After the fact, the thing is relived and reflected upon. Stories, which become more grandiose with the passing of time, emerge and are retold. A feeling of pure joy comes with the backward glance.

I first learned of this human inclination many years ago as a backpacker. My partner was most often John Rose. He was a kindred spirit. We shared a love for the mountains, for fishing, for Willie Nelson, for driving our car down county roads in an effort to become lost and for backpacking. Most of all, we shared a love for each other.

For us, there was a thin line between the definitions of hiking and being alive. When a trip was on the horizon (which was nearly every weekend and school break), we would start to plan and scheme and dream. We would load our backpacks and carry them in our cars days in advance...so as to be ready to head out at a moments notice. When the day arrived, we would lace up our boots, balance our packs, equalize our loads, and stand there at the trail head looking up. With a sideways glance and a hint of a smile, we would start walking. We knew, however, that the hike wouldn't be a walk in the park. We would have to keep our gear, not to mention our feet, dry when crossing streams or rivers. Sometimes we failed. The climb to the summit would be steep and would cause our leg and back muscles to beg for relief. There would be countless switchbacks which have a way of playing on your mind. It is difficult to turn and walk in a direction that seems to be leading you away from your destination...from the goal of the summit. There would be turned ankles from choosing the wrong rock to step on. There would be trips and falls from misjudging the height of an unearthed tree root (or from simply not having the energy to step that high). There would be times of getting stuck while trying to crawl through the limbs of a tree that had fallen over the trail. There would be times when we would be uncertain if we were even on the trail at all. We constantly battled regulating our body temperatures and staying hydrated. Sometimes it would rain. Sometimes it would get dark.

There was, of course, euphoria when we reached the top. It would be short lived. There was firewood to gather. If we had chosen to take them along, there would be tents to set up. There was water to be found and canteens to be refilled. There was dinner to cook. Then there was the cold. I can remember spending more than one sleepless night wrapped in a North Face mummy bag with only my nose poking out. I can remember waking up to frost inside my tent which had formed from my breath.

The trip down whichever mountain we had climbed would be no real picnic either.

But, none of it would matter when we were dry, warm, and sitting at the nearest pizza place. That was our tradition. We would stop and eat pizza and begin telling the stories. It was in those moments, sitting there with John reflecting on what we had just done...the thing that was completed...the thing that was accomplished...that I first came to know that special kind of joy. It would wash over me. I came to expect it. I came to look forward to it. I came to love John more and more for being alongside me...for being a part of it...for sharing the joy.

I felt it again last night, sitting around my kitchen table. Our oldest son, nearly 21 now, had come in from a day of hunting. He smelled like a campfire...dressed in his camo gear and carrying his rifle with care and respect. He told us the stories of the day with great detail and well chosen words. He is a good storyteller. Somewhere in the middle of his soliloquy, I couldn't hear him any more. I just felt it. The wash. The joy. The realization. The euphoria.

His mother and I carefully planned. We stood at the trail head, nearly 21 years ago, and looked up. With a sideways glance and the hint of a smile, we started the walk. To be sure, the trail to raising him, as with any child, was filled with switchbacks, steep climbs, loose rocks, downed trees, bitter cold and dark nights. But none of that matters...it is the price you pay for getting to make the trip. The thing is essentially done. What's left now are the stories. And the pure joy.

As I looked at him, I saw that he is standing at the foot of his own mountain with youthful optimism. I wish him well. I wish him safe passage.

As I looked at his younger brother, now a Senior in High School, I began to realize that our climb together is coming to an end as well. I began to feel the first twinges of the joy. The stories have started forming.

As I thought about our daughter, only 11, I was thankful that there are more mountains to climb...that our trip isn't completely over. I like the the climb. Or, I like the joy that comes with it.

Most of all, I looked at Connie. I am thankful that she is my partner. It has been she and I that have climbed and are climbing together. She and I, alone, know the travails and the pitfalls. She and I, alone, know the struggle. It is she and I, however, that also share the euphoria...the sense of "completing." Alone. They are "our" stories. A sideways glance...a hint of a smile...a world of our own. Pure, simple joy.

I thought of John tonight. I was in college at Gardner-Webb. He was at App State. It was this time of year...just a few days before our respective Thanksgiving breaks. My backpack was already packed. I had spoken to him on the phone. The day before we were to leave, I got the call telling me that John had died. His off-campus fraternity house caught fire. He was overcome by smoke while trying to pull someone else out of the fire. I remember being on the phone in my own apartment...looking at my backpack in the corner...thinking about a trip that would never happen. And, thinking about all the trips that did.

Pure, simple joy.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am Jennifer Rose, John's cousin. That was a wonderful thing you wrote. He is missed so much. He will always remain in our hearts.
Thanks

David White said...

Jennifer...nice to hear from you. I remember your cousin often. True...after over 20 years...some of the details are fuzzy, but not the impressions and the fond memories. We had so many adventures together. There are so many stories about John...and not just with me. His circle was wide. That is one of the things we all loved about him. Perhaps...should we meet sometime...I'll share some of them with you. Be well.
David

Anonymous said...

I stumbled upon Mr. White's post/link here quite by accident. I was reading the Shelby newspaper online, something I hardly ever do, and happened to see John's picture, and clicked it to read more.
Though life has taken me far from Shelby, I did grow up there. I was the quiet kid, half the time no one knew I was even there. The other half of the time I was picked on for being so quiet, sometimes quite mercilessly. When I was 12, my father bought me a dirt bike. It was summer, and I wanted nothing more than to ride that bike. One fateful day, I happened to be riding, when I passed John Rose near one of the trails I rode. I knew of him from school, but we ran in different circles (heck, I didn't even have a circle to run in). He was one of the popular boys. I was a nobody. He stopped me and asked about the bike, and asked if he could ride. I said yes. When he came back, we sat on the grass hill and talked. And it became a pattern for us. Almost every afternoon we would meet, and ride, taking turns. A cynic would say that John was just using me for my bike (as most boys would!), but that wasn't the case. After we'd ride, we'd sit on the hill and just talk, sometimes for hours. Many times my dad would have to come looking for me because I was late for dinner. To the outside world, it was nothing special, just two kids sitting around talking, but to me, it was priceless. John respected me, something no one at school ever did. Eventually our lives shifted and separated. I didn't see John much at school, and if I did, we only exchanged a smile. I was too painfully shy to talk to anyone at school, but that was my demon to battle, and no one else's. By the next summer, I had lost interest in the bike, and got a job babysitting. Life wore on, taking me into the teen years and beyond. I was in college when I heard the news of John's death. It shook my very soul.
I have never forgetten the kindness John Rose showed me. When I tell my children not to "judge a book by its cover", it's always John I think about, and the respect he showed me that summer. He was a rare person, and I'm lucky to have met him, even for a brief time. I'm only sorry I never got to thank him for his friendship.
Thank you for letting me tell my story of John here. It is no surprise to me that he touched so many lives in his too-short time on this earth.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the article, reminding me of John Rose. I met John in kindergarten which of course was in his basement and backyard! We were together for 13 years, graduating from Shelby High in 1982. John was such a likeable guy. He didn't have one enemy. He had a rare way of connecting with all kinds of people. I'm sad that his life was cut short. I bet he'd be backpacking with his own family, passing on his love of the outdoors to them today.

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