| My
feet are still not entirely healed. They look like dancer's feet-the
right big toe finally lost the scab from the wound I got running
for a train in Paris, all the way through the station with 45 lbs
of bag behind me and 15 more on my shoulder, the toe bleeding a
bright crimson stream through the crowded halls; my heels have the
shiny yellow skin of not-quite healed blisters -- one stubborn monster
still cracks open nearly every day and bleeds all over everything.
The other blisters, seven on one foot and three more on another,
are nearly gone, new pink skin showing in circles of renewal.
I admire them every day, my feet. They are my proof
that it was not a figment of my imagination, those days of innocence
in the hot sun of Provence, those days that seem all the more magical
for all that happened after, those days spent in one test after
another, one joy after another, long stretches of silence because
we were all too out of breath to talk to each other, those terrifying
stretches across granite slopes that led to certain death in the
turquoise waters of the Verdon River below if we slipped (or so
it seemed at the time). Those evenings spent laughing and drinking
the finest light red wine I've ever tasted, those nights spent sleeping
like a teenager with wind blowing through an open window.
For several years, I'd been wanting to try a walking
tour in Europe--and I'd been looking around for a reward trip for
myself for quite a while. Life had been changing a lot, and I needed
a way to take a look at what it had become. When a description of
the tour showed up in my email box in January, I immediately knew
I would do it. Price was excellent (less than $600 for a week of
lodging and meals in Provence) and it was highly recommended by
a travel site I respect -- Arthur Frommer's Budget Travel. I also
knew exactly who I wanted as a companion, a fellow writer and walking
enthusiast who travels intrepidly -- and speaks French, which I
do not.
The tour would be fairly strenuous by the description
-- hiking nearly every day, all day. To prepare, I kicked up my
exercise routine, adding a kickboxing class once a week, and getting
serious about the ellipse machine to build the muscles necessary
for climbing hills. I began a program of weight lifting to strengthen
my back and arms. A couple of times a week, I walked four to five
miles to break in the new boots. By the time we left Colorado at
the end of August, I felt pretty strong and healthy and eager to
test myself on those hills. Sonia and I spent a few days walking
Paris before meeting our tour group at the Nice airport on a Sunday
morning -- cheerful, ready, excited. We were trained. Ready. We're
strong and athletic, and hey, we're from Colorado -- we know about
altitude. Those petty ascents were nothing, baby. We LIVE at higher
altitudes than that.
Well.
The first morning, we set out from St. Andres de
Alpes and went straight up for what seemed like 40 years. On scree,
loose and gray beneath our hiking boots, at sometimes very steep
inclines. They were, admittedly, narrow winding paths beneath beautiful
forest, but who noticed the scenery? We hiked upward and upward
and upward the entire morning, and both of us (privately) thought
this might end up being the most miserable week of our lives. By
our midmorning break, we were sure we were idiots with no brains
whatsoever, and we ought to just cancel out now.
But as it happened, we stopped for chocolate biscuits
in an open grove nearby an old farmhouse with a history. High in
those Alps, far from any road, the Marais -- the French Resistance
named for the growth in the mountains around us -- had once had
a headquarters here. (And everywhere we saw the evidence of them,
plaques in the churches, plaques where a brave Resistance worker
had been gunned down in a square by the Germans, plaques of thanks,
plaques....the French are very big on plaques, and I'm grateful.)
And I don't know about Sonia, but sitting on an
ancient wall, looking at those isolated farmhouses, I thought it
might end up being worth it. My feet were already hurting at 10
am -- and they would never get better all week long, only worse
and worse and worse because my hiking boots were not right for my
feet. I'd tried on dozens and dozens of pairs, and these had been
the only ones that felt right, and I'd dutifully broken them in
over the summer, wearing them until they were comfortable, but my
high arches and hard-to-fit feet are going to need special boots.
That morning, I applied Band-Aids to a couple of the worst places,
and set out with a lighter heart.
For another long, miserable climb. I kept worrying
that I sounded like I was out of shape, and wanted to keep the gasping
to a minimum. There was really no breath left for talking, so we
each found our own pace within the group. And that was how it began
-- my week of contemplation.
I walked alone often, somewhere in the middle of
the group. No headphones. No companion. Just me and my thoughts
and Spirit coming along to see if I'd notice the gifts spread out
around me. Like the glimpses of that magnificent river below us,
the color so extraordinary I'll never see another like it. Like
the light glistening on the pine needles and the lavender, growing
wild on the rocky hillside. My favorite plant.
We paused at lunch for a picnic. Our leader, named
Pip, a Brit with nut-brown skin and beautiful legs and a most impressive
scar over her belly from a recent parasailing run-in with a road
sign, spread out a table cloth and gave us all jobs. We sliced goat
cheeses and cucumbers and tomatoes, and feasted on French bread
sandwiches. Drank water in great gulps--it was a three-liter day,
but there would be a place to fill our bottles in an hour or two--and
took off our boots to let the sun and dry air cool them.
And finally, after lunch, we went downhill. As hard
in its way as going up, but at least I didn't breathe hard. By the
time we reached Castellane, 12 or 15 hard miles later, our water
bottles filled at a village spring, every muscle in my body hurt.
Every centimeter of my feet throbbed. I was drenched in the sweat
that would be my constant companion over the next week. My hair
was limp, my skin itching, my backpack straps drenched with it.
My heels throbbed and one of the other members of the group, a British
ER nurse, gave me zinc oxide tape to put on the nasty blisters.
But I'll tell you -- it was worth it. Standing there
in that square, my heart sang. Every molecule hummed with the exercise,
with sunlight and challenge; every organ rejoiced at the challenge
met. My legs knew why they'd spent those hours at the gym, my shoulders
thanked me for doing those reps with the weight machines because
they didn't ache from the pack. An Irish woman and I sailed off
to a cafe for big beers, and I sat there in unbrushed, sweat-soaked
hair, a green tank top and black sports bra and feet in hiking boots,
feeling as glorious as I ever had in my life.
Every single day we hiked between 12-15 miles. The
final day was even tougher than the first in terms of ascents and
descents, but we were all much more comfortable with each other
by then, having survived the terrors of the Verdon Gorge together
(including backward descents down steep ladders and scary, dark
tunnels, and crossings requiring ropes we had to hold onto), and
we set our own pace through the trials. I walked alone much of the
day, somewhere in the middle, listening to the sound of birds and
insects, sometimes lagging to find a companion -- often Sonia, who
turned out to be an even better travel companion than I had imagined;
sometimes Glen, a big Aussie with a booming voice and big heart
who loved American movies; sometimes Richard, a young Brit with
a droll, witty sense of humor that had kept six women (including
me) pinned to him the night before at dinner. He reminds me very
much of my eldest son.
On those long, hard uphill climbs the final day,
my five liters of water did not weigh me down. I carried them easily.
On the hard, long uphill climbs that last day, I forgot to be concerned
with my hair or the sound of my breath. I had forgotten to be concerned
with externals, so I didn't care any more if I was breathing raggedly
or if anyone heard me.
Now, let me tell you -- my feet hurt. By then, I
had twenty blisters (that is not hyperbole), three of them quite
serious, one that was so disgusting and bloody that three people
gathered to watch the trimming and doctoring of it at the end of
the day. It was a day without water stops, so we had to carry what
we needed, and I'd learned I needed about half again as much as
the leader recommended, so I carried six liters. I was proud to
note that my shoulders hadn't ached with it.
The challenge that day was not uphill. It was downhill.
Down and down and down and down, on a slippery, scree-covered mountainside.
Down so far and so long that we started calling it Purgatory Hill
-- down for hours and hours and hours.
By the time we reached the bottom, my feet felt
like bloody stumps, and when we reached a stream outside the village,
I waded gleefully into it, standing for minutes in the cold, praising
all the saints that had ever lived for the glory of it, and gladly
walked the rest of the way -- all of it uphill--to our last stop.
And sitting there, in a sidewalk cafe in a tiny
village in Provence, my feet bare, my heart sang. The sun poured
down on us, and the river rushed by in noisy splendor, and high
in the canyon, a golden star winked in the afternoon light.
I was whole. I was free. I DID it. I survived. And
not only survived - I loved it. Just me, the me who is me, who is
in tune with whatever is Good. No children, no husband, no writing,
no anything -- just me, walking along minute by minute, doing it.
Doing it.
I arrived home in Pueblo at 2:30 am on Tuesday September
11th. I awakened at 8:30, jet lagged beyond belief (it doesn't get
me on the way east, but I die going west). A few minutes later,
my grandmother called to make sure I was home and safe and said
someone had bombed the Pentagon. I thought she must be mistaken.
Of course, she wasn't. I spent the morning glued to the television
along with the rest of the nation, knowing my friend Sonia was going
to be stranded in Paris.
Provence gave me back myself, a self who had been
lost to me for a time, lost in the changing nature of my life --
children growing up, career changing direction, marriage changing,
even my neighborhood was changing. Suddenly everything about my
life was different, and I had no idea what it would look like when
the transition was through. And I didn't LIKE it! I wanted things
to go back to the way they were. I was uncomfortable. I had no script.
I even thought at times that I was just crazy.
That morning of the 11th, all of our lives changed
forever. And I, standing there with my aching feet, thinking of
my trip through Dulles the night before, realized that I was a different
person than I had been the day I left. By walking those hills, meeting
those challenges, and by bringing back the quiet, simple joy of
those mountains in a land I fell in love with, where I couldn't
even speak well with the locals, I had become someone more able
to meet the personal changes in my life -- but also the enormous,
incredible challenge of trying to still believe in a world that
could be whole.
Everyone keeps asking me if I'll continue to be
an avid traveler, if I am afraid. And the answer is, no, I'm not.
I don't believe there are any more risks involved in travel than
there ever were--perhaps a few more delays, a few inconveniences--but
I don't mind them. The chance to step away from my life, see it
from a distance, check out our relationship to ourselves and others
in a new way, without all the props of daily life is worth it. The
chance to see who I am in connection to new places, new people,
new ideas and ways of doing things is worth it. To see the moon
rise, full and pink, over the Seine on a cold summer night with
a rich wine in my belly and the rooftops of Paris rising in the
night...it's so worth it.
I also can't wait to do it again. I need to see
Havana for some inexplicable reason and I know we aren't supposed
to go there, but it's calling me in a visceral way. I don't know
what it will tell me. I don't know if I'll actually do it. Maybe
instead, I'll choose Spain, or Peru, or go to Scotland to look for
the Loch Ness monster with my son. But I'll go. Somewhere, sometime.
Soon, I hope.
And then I'll come back and share it with you. Or
perhaps you'll go and share it with me. Write me an email or post
your stories of travel and change on the bulletin board. I'd love
to hear of your best adventure.
Till next time,
Barbara
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