Part III: Down to Earth
The number 3,776 (meters above sea level- Fuji's summit) will be forever etched in my mind by the mild trauma I endured to get there. In terms of recovery, I am shocked that since I’ve come back I have all the signs of complete mental and physical soundness, even after
all of the viciousness that mountain threw at me. I still expect somewhere down
the line a condition will develop or a sudden or gradual loss of sanity will
occur and I will have this little “adventure” to blame. But for now I seem to
be ok. As more time passes, I forget why it was so bad, and even think I would
do it again… I should probably take this as a sign that I’m losing it.
...No matter how hard I tried, I could not get warm. The shivering
was now constant. Perhaps due to lack of sleep or my preoccupation with my
physical condition, I wasn’t really aware of whether I was truly at the top of
the mountain or not. And I didn’t care. I also realized that there would be no sunrise! We were essentially inside
a storm cloud, with very limited visibility. Again, I was hardly able to be
concerned. I saw that people were going inside some kind of building (the same
one I had been sitting against possibly?) and I rushed to join them.
Once inside, I was focused on trying to get warm- taking my gloves
off, rubbing my hands together, jogging in place. I began to realize that it
was actually some kind of shrine- there were several Shinto monks standing
behind a counter passing out amulets in return for some coins. My despair grew-
how could a sheltered room packed with people generate no heat for my frozen body?
(It didn’t occur to me that with my saturated ensemble in the freezing
temperatures, I was basically a human icicle!) A stranger handed me something.
A small heated pouch of the kind I have usually seen microwaved and used to
reduce muscle pain. I thanked the man and he disappeared. I set about using it
to try to make my hands warm. If only I
had a few hundred of these right now! (My friend later informed me that most
people on the mountain were probably carrying them, as was she. Because that’s
what you do in cold weather in Japan, didn’t I know that?)
“You look very cold.” My ears perked up at the sound of my own
language. Another foreigner dressed in a similar lack of appropriate gear had
wandered into the shrine. “There is a restaurant next door where you can get
hot soup- maybe that will help.” I followed him out of the shrine back into the
wind. Inside the next lodge, a group of his colleagues were waiting for meals.
They had apparently come to Japan on business and decided last minute to do a
side-trip to Fuji- except they hadn’t packed accordingly. One man from Iceland
had been certain that his national origin would be preparation enough- he was
wearing a thin wool sweater and had only recently swapped his shorts for pants.
The others had little more in the way of winter-ready attire. We all stood
there, a collective of fools on display for others’ amusement (I really do hope
though that our sorry state was at least good for a laugh for bystanders).
We inquired about the weather conditions; the lodge proprietors
explained that it was not advisable to climb down at the moment. But after an
hour of standing around in wet clothing, we realized that we needed to try. I
couldn’t wait anymore to look for my friends- they had either not made it or
had already come and gone, without us ever bumping into each other. I figured
it was better to stay with this group. We started our descent.
I couldn’t wear my gloves at all because they were wet and would
make my hands even colder. I alternated carrying my stick with one and putting
the other in a wet pocket. The walking wasn’t fast enough to generate heat
either. There was another line to get down. This got old very quickly, and we
decided to pass people- some members were going more slowly though, and since
they were friends they kept waiting for each other. But I really could no
longer afford to do so. I told them I’d meet them at the 8th station and picked
up the pace. Never saw them again either.
Have a rest here- this post is almost as long as the climb down! Haha
I was now booking it down the mountain. The trail had separated
into Up and Down paths and also converted once again into switchbacks. These
were steep enough on the ascent- on the way down, they proved even more tricky.
Pebbles slid under my feet like marbles on a concrete floor. While others had
hiking boots and rock-guards around their ankles and moved almost effortlessly
down the mountain, I only had my poor, battle-weary tennis shoes to convey me
earthward. I skidded downward, nearing a speed comparable to skiing. Hitting a
particularly unstable mound of them meant sliding out of control. There were
quite a few times when I couldn’t regain my equilibrium- the result: bouncing
down the mountain on my ass. One exceptionally spectacular fall had me trying
to catch my balance by throwing my weight to the side… I ended up flailing my
arms wildly, doing a 360 degree spin and sailing headfirst down the slope!
People came to my aid, only to discover me laughing hysterically. I must have
looked like a maniac!
Just a moment later, I discovered my friend waiting alongside the
path. It was so relieving to find her- I had been wondering how we would meet
up again, what with our phones not working. I had assumed I could get back to
the city by myself- but I had mostly been focused on actually making it down
the mountain. She told me that she had only made it as far as the 9th
station- by the time she reached it, the weather was so bad that they started
sending people back down. (Yeah, I definitely shouldn’t have been up there). We
started down together, but she was still moving at a snail’s pace (she’d been
mobile for two extra hours and
started down before me!), so I told her I would move on and meet her at the Fifth station.
It seemed to take ages to reach the Sixth- the Seventh gets
the skip on the descent path, not to mention there was a longer distance to
walk back this time. But I was finally on the home stretch! And it was finally
not freezing. Unfortunately, my knees were not cooperating, as the repeated
smashing of my patella into my tibia on the way down had caused quite a lot of
pain. I was now having to so a sideways crab-scuttle to continue descending,
and I could no longer move quickly. I just wanted it to be over already! I was
tempted to use my remaining strength to kick all of the people who were passing
me in apparently cheerful moods. At long last I made it though, resisting the
urge to lift my arms in the air in a victory gesture as I approached the Fifth. I
immediately went to a restroom to attempt to find some dry clothes within my
pack- to no avail! I selected the least soaked items, dejectedly put them back
on, and went to wait for my friend…
Thankfully, we went to an onsen before heading back to the city- I
had to make amends with my body for so egregiously mistreating it. Relaxing in
a hot mineral bath was exactly what I needed at the end of this excursion! When
we got on the bus to head home, I looked back at the mountain through the
window. Clouds were still gathered around it, and I thought of the people who
must at that moment be attempting to navigate that mad, swirling snow-globe… I
laughed to myself. Good riddance Fuji!!!
Additional updates: I never saw the group that we were meant to
meet up with. Apparently they had the same problem my friend did, having to go
back down because of the weather. Only 3 out of 11 of them made it to the summit.
The assertion by a colleague, who had previously done the climb,
that I would “ruin a pair of sneakers” was absolutely correct. My 10-year old
reliable pair of tennis shoes that has traveled all over the world with me
sadly didn’t make it. Bless their soles.
My poor shoes! Their soles have separated from their bodies haha, time for a funeral. ...or maybe I can resurrect them by doing some triage with Shoe Glue? |
Oh yeah, and the moral of
the story: ‘Survival of the fittest’ is clearly just theory.
Wait, I’m not sure that’s the lesson I was supposed to learn…