I haven't posted here in over a year now. I have been a bit uninspired by the whole "Hey check me out!" sort of direction skiing and our world has gone in the past few years. I'm slightly ashamed to say that I have been a part of it, I have an Instagram that is mostly filled with skiing photos and very little story telling or good information sharing. I have degraded adventures by making them square and throwing a filter over the top.
I've always thought that it would be amazing to make a living out of sharing photos and stories. I have spent considerable amounts of time trying to create art in the back country with my friends and my camera. We have gotten lucky more than a few times, created some stunning images that look great on glossy paper, and rack up the "Likes", like crazy. But something my images have always in my opinion failed to do is tell a story. Reflecting on my own images I see more photos that say, "look at this person doing this thing." I think my photography much like that of most others lacks emotion. I want to capture images that say, "Look at this moment. This is how it felt. Isn't that quite an amazing sensation?"
With the onset of digitization I think that photography lost a lot of its authenticity. It is too easy to point and shoot now. I know that every great photographer came from thousands of frames no matter the physicality of there negatives, but when I look at photographers whose work I admire for their appeal to emotion it seems they all have roots in shooting film. It seems like our world is loosing authenticity at an alarming rate, it is becoming far to easy to be something you are not, something you haven't earned or possibly do not even know two cents about. Students of film seem to provide intention in every frame and capture things beyond the visible spectrum.
It is a bummer that my lack of inspiration by the commercial ski scene and a bad day in January have really limited the number of days I have shot with intention this season. But here a bunch of photos we have grabbed through out the season so far and captions to go along with them.
P.S. We shot 54 images with disposable cameras on our California trip a couple weeks ago. It was one of the best weeks of skiing I have ever had. I can't wait to see the story our photos tell.
Day 2: My second morning of skiing was on Monarch Pass in late October with Sam. We managed to get two laps in on a short north facing bowl before returning to Gunnison by 9:00 for class. I'd call it powder skiing more than rock scratching.
Early in November Elias and I headed back up to Monarch to grab a couple of laps before the sunset. I had been at work all day and we raced for the light after hatching a plan while molding his boot liners in the shop earlier that afternoon. I have developed this photo multiple times now and still haven't been happy with an honest presentation of the moment. Given the lighting conditions and my equipment I think this is as close as I will get. Strawberry flavored pow!
Early season conditions near the Paradise Divide were all time. At this time we were still able to drive all the way to Pittsburgh, which is a small town site only accessible by ski's or snow machine during the deeper winter months. Reflecting on it now the vibe back at the trailhead that day had so much "Opening Day" stoke. Tons of stoked crews that had skied in different zones all day coming together to finish it with high fives and smiles. Skiing good snow generates some undeniable camaraderie.
CAW CAW!
Head north! It kept being really good, and we kept waking up early.
This photo was taken a day or two after getting back to Colorado from a Thanksgiving Trip home with Sophie, Gavin, Brad, and Andrew. After having been gone for awhile I felt pretty out of touch with the snowpack. Early in the season when the snow is still quite shallow things can be especially dynamic, with weak layers relatively close to the surface and easy to impact, Tucker, Sam and I took it easy skiing low angle powder fields. Tele-skiers think the are so "soulful".
Early in December we started to get out on a few longer tours. It is my first season with a snowmobile and it has provided access to so much inspiring terrain. It has been a pleasure exploring new mountains that have been just out of reach for the past three seasons.
I was lucky enough to get to go home to the Sierra for the Christmas holiday. My long time friend Chance and I spent the majority of our three weeks back ski instructing at Mammoth. Every day we would try to sneak off for a few free runs at lunch or after work. Conditions were great all break it was awesome to experience a little bit of California's best season in the past 5 years. This photo is of Chance in bounds after a long day of teaching 3-5 year olds how to pizza and french fry.
On my birthday Chance and I took a cosmic tour to the summit of Mammoth via Roadrunner. Here he is posing underneath Chair 14 with the lights of Fresno in the background. We skied fresh Corduroy down cornice bowl after midnight, and crashed in the upstairs of Main Lodge before waking up at 6 to go back to work.
Ouch. Tucker sent it big on this day and bomb holed to dirt. Thankfully we got him packaged up quickly and he was only out of the game for a couple of weeks. This was the last day that I have shot my DSLR all season. My camera played an obvious roll in or decision making on this day and upon reflection of the day I decided to set it down for a bit. Turns out soul shredding and not telling to many people about it has been pretty fun and I haven't felt the need to take a "professional photo" since.
At a certain point you start to realize that ski touring is just a really round about way to pooping in awesome places.
A really really round about way, with the biggest dumps come the best turns. (This is what its all about)
For the past few years we have been heading to a nice low key zone in the San Juans. There isn't much ski history in the area and I think it is safe to say that Sam, Dylan, Matt, Myself, and a couple other people have been opening some new and quite high quality runs. This is Sam on his way to another new place.
The Memphis Couloir. 2,900ft. No one owns the mountains.
Life, learning, and skiing
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Musing in a Trailer
I was a skier, who grew up in a
climbing town, working in a bike shop, and now most people just call me a dirt
bag. I’m your next door neighbor except I live in a unregistered and title-less
13 foot trailer that cost me $300 and is parked in my buddy’s drive way. It’s
not the most glamorous joint but I enjoy it. There is plenty of room for my
skis, my ropes, and my bikes and even more when I manage to put them away in
there prescribed places between trips. But let’s be real the next outing is
tomorrow or maybe even tonight and while drying your skins inside a Rubbermaid
may produce some funny fungi for the weekend it doesn’t do much to increase
glide. Plus, doesn't she look really cute lying there asleep on top of my gear
closet? Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you it doubles as a bed.
I’m a college student in a
valley that creates lifelong residents, fun hoggin’ is fine in Gunnison so long
as your work is done and you let your character speak louder than your wallet. It’d
be pretty easy to call me a slacker but actually saying it wouldn’t be true; I am
a proud conquistador of the useless, everyday; going, growing, and discovering.
Last week my buddy Todd and I skied out of his
back door in Lake City. He lives year round, rent free, without running water
at the base of two of Colorado’s famed fourteener’s Sunshine, and Redcloud. Moose
and bobcat frequent his front yard more often than the wealthy Texans who own
the mansion visible high on the hill above. Todd, however doesn’t have a single
shade of green envy to give his millionaire neighbors. With a Bachelor’s degree
in Biology, he’s is a dirt bags, dirt bag, doing the simple living thing better
than anyone that I have ever met has. So well in fact he almost makes me feel
self-conscious at four in the morning, bundled up in my ultralight puffy, he’s
getting the same damn thing done in a second hand cotton sweat shirt. Todd chops
and sells firewood by the chord to pay the bills, ski’s every day of the
winter, and rides his mountain bike at 13,000 feet on the Continental Divide Trail
as soon as the snow is gone. He ain’t slacking. He’s doing his own thing,
living lightly, respecting you, respecting himself, and giving me something to
admire.
At
home in Bishop, Rowell, Robinson, Croft, and Jensen, were names on the sides of
mail boxes not the bottoms of posters and much like them, I found salvation in
the High Sierra. Blessed by patient mentors and surrounded by idols who I couldn’t
even muster the balls to talk to. Come the eleventh grade I was a full on dirt
worshipping, rock licker who’s best friends shot waterfowl before class, and
thought pebble wrestling was about as liberal as you could get! I’d haul ass up Highway 168 to the Buttermilk
Country after class, run ridges on the weekends, and on a day with more than
six inches of new snow I was more likely to be found on one of Mammoth Mountain’s
first chairs than in Mr. Perry’s first period.
Without the sage, the hills, the
granite, the stellars, and the facets, my existence starts too feel a bit like
the bull frogs; wallowing in the mud and belching to attract his mate. Face shots aren’t the key to world peace, but
they definitely make me a better person and I’d be willing to bet they make you
feel the same way. Because I’m not
sending 5.14, racing The Tour Divide, or skiing the steeps fast enough for film,
what I do out there is probably capable of mattering nothing to you. But
someday we might get the chance to share a glassy January sunset from a high
ridge, a bowl of coveted pink powder laying virgin, waiting for our tracks
bellow. I’ll ski with everybody at least
once but if somehow that event fails to manifest itself you’ll most likely continue
to think I’m just the bum who mounted your skis and tuned your derailleur.
However just like You, Todd, Croft, and Jensen I’m living my life, practicing my crafts, and trying to garner whatever selfish rewards the world has to offer. Like all beautiful things, the warm simplicity of napping in the soft grass of an alpine meadow, with numb legs from a ten hour effort, and a full soul from everything I’ve learned along the way provides me with a simple sense of pride. A sense of pride that makes my 13 foot trailer look like a wealthy Texans vacation home, and helps grinding your blown out ski bases feel more like sculpting Michelangelo’s, David.
\
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Getting Barrelled On Your Bike
Been thumbing through old writing on my computer this morning. I wrote this short essay for the local newspaper when I was in high school it is about one of my favorites in Bishop, Dutch Johns Loop. Bikes have been making me smile for a long time.
Inhaling deeply
the burn in my stomach subsides, cool air fills my lungs and I shift into the
higher range of my fully rigid nine speed mountain bike, exhale with pleasure.
Now settling into the smooth cadence of a long mountain climb massive views of
the Owens Valley below greet me and the sky wispy with stratus clouds seems to
expand beyond infinity. On this fall afternoon I will ride to over 8,000 feet
above sea level and still be dwarfed by my western surroundings of multiple
13,000 foot peaks. Living in the Eastern Sierra this is more often the case
than not. No matter how immense the tasks we take on in these surroundings, our
efforts and accomplishments never exceed the amounts of beauty we experience
while out.
For nearly an hour
I continue upward, my legs burn with every downward stroke of the peddle as my bicycle
crawls over a mix of granite cobbles and wheel swallowing sand. The four wheel
drive road bully’s me from one tire track to the other. I find solace in sighting a group of Mule
Deer. Two does that are moving with there fawn bound across the road no more
than twenty five yards ahead. The climb
and pain along with it simply disappear for a moment. Inspired by the deer’s
skillful navigation through the dense sage and scattered rock, I am forced to
refocus my attention ahead. Carefully picking the most efficient line and
riding with more grace and precision than ever before. The climb is made much easier, and dare I say
enjoyable.
Eventually rubber
meets the packed and tacky soils left behind by the previous night’s rain fall.
Here the double tracks grade lessens, beginning to contour flawlessly with the
undulating terrain. My largest chain-ring
comes to use as I brake out in a heavy winded sprint. Bunny hopping boulders
and railing turns with aggression I descend into a creek drainage. It is exploding
with the hues of fall. Aspen forest engulfing me, the tunnel of yellow, red and
orange becomes a constant blur. I enter a trance like state resulting in
effortless flow. Body position and tire pressure
are the only things I rely on to absorb the terrain ahead. The feeling is that of Ecstasy; a surfers
perfect barrel, a skiers coldest powder snow face shot, something that has to
be felt to be believed.
A similar wave exists in Colorado. Gavin took this photo of me getting barrelled on Lowline Trail last fall. |
At the end of my
ride there will be no podium, no beautiful woman waiting to hand over a
champagne bottle, and that is just fine by me. In the Sierra’s the magnitude of
your efforts can never surmount the beauty you are surrounded by, but there is
no defeat in that. On this ride my only competition is myself. The only beautiful woman I am seeking is with
me the entire time, Mother Nature and her fresh water streams are the greatest
reward I could ever receive and one of the many reasons I ride my bike.
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Andrew's new route, Straight To Hell 5.11a/10d R
A typical Gunnison scene epic tunes from Ween filling the air, 4 drunk dudes, 1 spoken for girl and a kitchen table littered with climbing magazines and PBR cans. My friend Andrew fresh back from his first trip to Chamonix in the wrong season, (should have gone skiing, not climbing) and full of enthusiasm brings up a line he'd been eyeing at Hartmans the last couple of days. He described it as a sort of British gritstone type of line, steep face climbing, three pieces of iffy thin gear in all of fifty feet. He and Elias made plans to go check it out last night and I tagged along with a couple prusiks and my camera.
Most of us think of Hartman Rocks as a sort of nancy bolted sport crag. It would be hard to give the place a standard ethic. The grading is all messed up and many bolts are bad, most likely a product of college student first ascensionists. There are a few classic run out slabs in the 5.10 range, but most routes are short, slabby, and probably rap bolted. Only a few traditional lines exist, and yesterday Andrew added a gem.
Having top roped the route a couple times before he knew what he needed to "protect it" and hoped on the sharp end, nailing it! Elias and I both TR'd it, neither of us climbing it clean on our first goes. It is stellar face climbing, thin and balancy, on high quality rock. I cant imagine placing the fiddly ass gear on lead, good job Andrew!
Most of us think of Hartman Rocks as a sort of nancy bolted sport crag. It would be hard to give the place a standard ethic. The grading is all messed up and many bolts are bad, most likely a product of college student first ascensionists. There are a few classic run out slabs in the 5.10 range, but most routes are short, slabby, and probably rap bolted. Only a few traditional lines exist, and yesterday Andrew added a gem.
Having top roped the route a couple times before he knew what he needed to "protect it" and hoped on the sharp end, nailing it! Elias and I both TR'd it, neither of us climbing it clean on our first goes. It is stellar face climbing, thin and balancy, on high quality rock. I cant imagine placing the fiddly ass gear on lead, good job Andrew!
Monday, July 21, 2014
A Long Awaited and Brief Recap
Matt and I at the EMGT finish line |
Skiing
is my passion and it is what brought me to Western, the vast expanse of the Elk
Mountains promised me endless opportunities for my favorite type of
adventuring, backcountry skiing . With the passing of two winters now in the
range I have to admit the mountains have shown me more joy than I ever believed
possible, and have cultivated multiple friendships that will stand the test of
time. People find bliss in many different places; and for me, my place is the mountains,
on the East Face of Gothic Mountain and at the finish line of The Elk Mountain
Grand Traverse. This year our range was blessed with epic amounts of snow and
it kept my friends and I on ski’s, earning turns all the way into June. I finished my season on the 5th with a very
special descent of the Refrigerator Coliour on Ice Mountain a remote peak that
is home to sustained 50 degree slopes and near vertical rock.
Half way down the East Face of Gothic on our last day of spring break. |
So with
the thinning of the snow pack and the blossoming of the Cottonwoods I began to
feel a bit out of places. Lost in a world without white, ecstatic about having
just experienced the best and most progressive season of my life; I was stoked
but I was not content. I longed for pow. And soon I would find it in a place that
I had almost forgotten.
Last few steep turns on Ice Mtn with Dylan and Matt. |
Pedaling
along, the sage fly’s by my side in a blur, the colors of a lush high desert
pallet; green’s, gold’s and grey’s are all vivid in there spring infancy. The clouds
are breaking above my head and the sun is dropping into an orange sky that lies
between the horizon line and cumulus above. Hartman Rocks and its miles of
trails north of the power line are now open. I turn onto Rattlesnake stand up
out of the saddle and begin to power through beautiful burning legs. Down the
first rock moves and onward to a glorious re-acquaintance with my second
favorite thing BROWN POW!
Riding
your bike is fun, it is fun in the hills, it is fun in town, it is fun with
friends and it is fun all by yourself. Last year in the dog days of summer it
may have even saved my life. At home in the California heat ,hanging drywall
for cash, depressed, questioning, and in content, I forced myself out on a forty
mile high country ride and somewhere between Coyote Flats and Baker Creek I
found a new happy, healthy energy. I
came home that day, quit my job the next, traded in my burnt out steel hard tail
for a new aluminum one, split for single track ridge riding in Lake Tahoe for a
few days, came back to Bishop for a couple and headed out to Moab and the La
Sals just a week later. Single track
salvation! Soon I was at home in Gunnison, riding above tree line in the Elks,
and through the sage again at Hartman’s.
This
summer I chose to make Gunnison my home, avoiding the 100 degree temps in
California and enjoying the splendors of life in the Elk Mountains with gratitude.
My mountain bike season began in unison
with the close of my ski season, and the decreased objective hazard in the
snowless hills has lent itself to daily exploration and long weekend epics, one
of the most beautiful things about dirt is that it doesn’t develop depth hoar.
In late
June I raced The Original Growler a 64 mile cross country race at Hartman Rocks
on a single nights notice. My co-worker and Mountain Sports Teammate Alex
passed his registration on to me because of a hurt knee and plans of an
upcoming trans-America mountain bike tour, GO ALEX! The Growler was short
enough for me to think I might be able to kind of race it but long enough to be
seriously humbling. I flatted twice, had to hike about ten minutes to get
another tube on my second, and cramped pretty darn bad at the Top of the World
on lap 2. For off the couch racing it was long, muddy, technical, and awesome!
I was stoked to finish in six hours and forty something minutes, and can’t wait
to try to go sub-six next year, better conditioned, and hopefully flat free.
As June
drew on I knocked off a few new and obscure rides feeling liberated by the
adventure of exploration and hard effort. One ride took me on a long climb in the West
Elks, up mining roads and down barely scratched in elk trail, another started
right out of campus headed east to the Fossil Ridge, where Mule Deer were my
only witnesses and the climbers at Taylor Canyons First Buttress must have
thought I had just finished Doctors Park.
The top of 401 at seven in the morning. |
As my Legs
started to get tired my head seemed to be hungry for a bit of fear, because I
began a three week climbing bender with my buddy Elias in late June. We were psyched on rock, making our way
through the grades at Taylor, and even putting up a few of our very own on
first ascents in the 5.10 range at splitter crag I had found out on a long ride
west of town. Rock climbing is a funny
sport for me, when I am motivated the fire burns hot and I cannot get enough,
but somehow it dies out overnight. I grow tired of pushing myself through the
fear and movement. Maybe it is too sedentary; to slow to reach the final
destination, I prefer the movement of a bike, the feeling of covering tons of
country, seeing many things, not having to stop at a belay. Unless of course it
is in the mountains, mountain climbing is different.
June
has become July and the high country riding is in full effect, wild flowers are
chest deep on the 401, and the alpine brown pow is being rejuvenated nearly
daily with afternoon thunder storms. Two
weeks ago I went big and failed on an all dirt Crested Butte to Gunnison ride,
it was to include, Trail 401, to Deer Creek, to Block and Tackle, to Reno,
Flag, Bear, Doctors, to Forest Road 586, and finally descend Signal Ridge. I
came up short at Harmels after ten hours, the climb up Forest Road 586 sounded heinous,
I was out of food and decided it best to throw in the towel and ride the
pavement home to Gunnison.
Coming down Flag Creek in the CB Classic |
The Crested
Butte Classic a 100 mile race came up a little less than a week later, and with
the absence of an entry fee or really much organization at all it seemed like
just my type of ride. A mellow scene and awesome course that included; Strand
Hill to Teocali Ridge on lap one, Reno, Flag, Bear, Deadmans from town on lap
two, and finished with Kebler Pass, the Dyke Trail, and Wagon Wheel back to
Crested Butte. A little nervous at the
start because of my recent big effort, I was stoked to fly through lap one feeling
great on the new Teocali re-routes. That trail is awesome and if you haven’t already
ridden it you need to get out there! Lap two was really hard, the climb up Reno
Divide seemed endless and I was alone for most of it not knowing if I was going
fast and suffering or going slow and suffering. My friend JP caught up to me at the bottom of
the Flag Creek descent and we pushed each other through the rest of the lap,
enjoying the best Bear Creek descent ever, filled with hollers of stoke and
all. I dropped JP on the road back to Crested Butte, and set out for lap three
all alone again. The Kebler climb went well, and I cleaned the entire Dyke
Descent but had no hope of clearing the steep single track climbs by that time
of day. I battled hard to keep up the cadence from Horse Park Ranch to the top
of Kebler knowing the end was near. Finally I was descending Wagon Trail completely
exhausted. I pulled into town in sixth place over all with a time of 10hrs
17mins. Cool!
Camping out at Emerald Lake. |
Ellie Coming down Agate Creek. |
Angela and Ellie Cruising along The Continental Divide Trail. |
Monday, March 3, 2014
AIARE Level Two and The Knox Frank Memorial Scholarship
It’s
sunny out, winds are light, and we’re all bundled up like two year olds
learning to ski at the resort. I am staring at a little blue book that I have
been familiar with for a number of years, but could never get a true grasp off.
It’s filled with technical jargon, specialized symbols, and a table for
standard to metric conversions. My instructors are talking about things like
temperature gradients in the snow pack, elaborating on the sizes and shapes of
snow grains, and teaching us how to record our data in a standardized and
usable way. I had always known that my beloved winter playground was far more
intricate than it appears upon first glance and finally light bulbs are going
of left and right inside my head. My
time spent reading, and learning through personal experiences gains clarity
with the help of professional instruction. Until now I had been intimidated by
the thought of implementing science on a ski tour. I was unsure of my ability
to proficiently take part in the process. Was I recognizing the right problems?
Was I using the right tests to examine those problems? Were my interpretations
of those test results correct?
Last
weekend I was blessed with one of the coolest and possibly most valuable
learning experiences of my life. I
graciously received the Knox Frank Memorial Scholarship to take my AIARE Level
2 Avalanche course with Crested Butte Mountain Guides. Knox past in the spring of 2012, a tragic
avalanche had taken him in the San Juan Range of Colorado. Though I was never
able to meet Knox, conversations with his friends have revealed a few of his
undeniable characteristics; Knox it seems had an insatiable appetite for life
and his hunger was fueled by great friends and beautiful mountains.
I
applied for his scholarship two Decembers ago, slaving over my laptop for hours
to put together a slide show and spoken essay that would accurately depict my
passion for the mountains and the wonderful things they have brought to my
life. In January of 2013 I attended the awards ceremony at the Brick Oven where
Knox’s parents presented his scholarship to that year’s winner. I didn’t win,
but I was approached afterwards by multiple people on the judging committee and
encouraged to apply again next year, they said it was a tough decision between myself
and the recipient. I had never been more
honored to come in second place in my life. I remember leaving the Brick and
calling my parents to inform them of my not so good, but somehow great news;
people liked what I had to say about the mountains.
One
year later I inquired about the scholarship again, in late January Jayson
Simons-Jones informed me that this time I had received the scholarship. Having been in love with snow for as long as
I can remember and studying it in my own un-formalized ways since my early
teenage years I was beyond excited to be given the opportunity to learn from
real professionals, especially in my new backyard of Crested Butte where the
snow seems to be ever changing and plagued with instabilities.
Now
having completed my avalanche two course I am even more grateful for the
generosity of Knox’s Friends and Family.
In my course I learned invaluable skills that will guide me along a
safer path as both a wild snow recreator and hopefully future professional. I
have not waited to put my newly acquired knowledge to practice and have already
experienced an increased level of confidence in my own decision making methods
since taking the course. Alan Bard once wrote, “Passion and vitality for living
are some of the gifts we receive from skiing, particularly skiing in the great
beyond.” A statement I could not agree with more and one that defines my life’s
most basic goal; to live passionately in pursuit of powder skiing, while
sharing the quest with others who may not have the same fortune of such regular
doses. So THANK YOU KNOX, and
everyone else who was involved in facilitating my continued avalanche
education.
Monday, February 3, 2014
Decision Making in the Avalanche Terrain of a Developing Mind
27 of
the 53 days I have spent on skis so far this season have been outside of resort
boundaries and off groomed nordic track.
On a good day, which there have been quite a few of lately I love skiing
the resort about as much as Flava Flav loves New York and big clock necklaces. But the backcountry offers me an escape that
the lifts sometimes cannot. When I’m out there it’s just my partner, the mountains,
and I, no social distractions, skittle thugs, or dean of students to talk too.
Just us, on our own unguided and untracked experience. But the potential cost of our solitude is
something that often comes into my mind.
I am an aggressive and young skier and so are the majority of my
partners. While I enjoy skinning through
the woods and surfing low angle powder snow nothing is more rewarding than
alpine views and big white canvases with s-shaped signatures. And so I seek to
find myself in these in these wild places every time the opportunity is
present.
The
prefrontal cortex of our brains is responsible for, memory, emotion, and
rational decision making. This area of our brain reaches morphological maturity
around the same time as puberty but its size is not relative to function until
later years of life. It has been confirmed
that the prefrontal lobes continue to both quantitatively and qualitatively develop
into our early twenties. The fact that the
part of my brain responsible for both decision and emotion is still developing
weighs heavy on my mind quite often. A
bad decision in the backcountry could produce an un-erasable result and have
effects that cascade far beyond my own selfish quest for fulfillment; to my
parents, my friends, and even the arm chair quarterbacks that seem to comprise
much of the online backcountry community.
Because
danger is inherent in wild snow skiing I make it a point to follow the snow and
weather with intent and passion. I have
fun on tours where my only goal is to look at the snow and a get a picture of
what might be in shape. I try to treat
every outing like a re-con mission and it has led to more and more amazing
summits and safely opened doors. But skiing powder snow is probably one of the
most emotional things I have ever done. I mean what experience is more
instantly gratifying than momentary weightlessness in a cloud of shimmering
crystals? It’s impossible for me to say with absolute assurance that the
undeveloped part of my brain responsible for both emotion and decision will always
make the correct call. Can I trust myself to overpower emotions with rational every
time? So far I think I have done a pretty good job, I've pulled the plug more
than I have flipped the switch and I've only regretted turning on the lights once.
Skiing
is probably the coolest thing I have ever done, but as for the coolest thing I
have ever had? My family takes the cake without a doubt and my frontal lobe
better be able to remember that on top of every line for the rest of my life.
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