国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

rock climbing minnesota minneapolis children fear
Why is there a baby in a climbing harness? (Photo: Carlos Caetano/<a href="http://w)

Get Me Out of Here: Rock Climbing

Katie Heaney confronts her two greatest fears: going up and going down

Published: 
rock climbing minnesota minneapolis children fear
(Photo: Carlos Caetano/<a href="http://w)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

This is the one I鈥檝e been waiting for.

Not waiting in the way I wait for the weekend or Christmas, but waiting in the way I wait for death. It was a passive, begrudging kind of waiting. I waited for it because I knew it was true鈥攂ecause it didn鈥檛 appear that I鈥檇 be able to come up with a way out. To cope, I pushed it from my mind and thought instead of other things I鈥檇 have to deal with first, but it was always there, hovering and wailing and laughing maniacally.

And it was so nearby, too. I knew I鈥檇 be climbing indoors because I live in Minnesota and it is November, but I did not realize that the place I鈥檇 be doing it in was (rather insidiously, I thought) stationed a mere five blocks from my apartment, for who knows how long. If it seems a stretch to say that 鈥 mere physical proximity to my apartment felt like a threat, then you have not been reading this column closely.

It鈥檚 not the scariest thing I could do, and I know that. But among activities I鈥檓 actually willing to do, rock climbing is perhaps the most literally oppositional to my twin greatest fears: ascending heights and later coming down from them. From my understanding, falling from the walls is actually going to be required of me. I will be climbing directly upwards, in the exact opposite direction from the one I鈥檓 led to believe humans were designed to traverse, I will come to a stop a few dozen feet above the ground, and then, finally, I will be made to simply let go and assume that my fall won鈥檛 kill me. You can鈥檛 make this shit up.

IT鈥橲 JUST SO PERFECT too that they鈥檙e playing 鈥淲elcome to the Jungle鈥 as Rylee and I walk in鈥攕o deceptively menacing, the way it becomes clear soon enough that 鈥渇un and games鈥 doesn鈥檛 really mean nice fun and games. We approach the young climbers (or, I suppose, climbing fans) working behind the desk and are told to fill out in-case-your-fall-is-a-bad-one waivers at the bank of computers along the back wall. I鈥檝e never seen these forms handled electronically, and it feels weird to sign away my legal rights on the same type of machine I swipe my credit card through when I buy groceries. Poor organization and a lack of instruction make me nervous, but conversely, so too does the slick, near over-preparedness of this place. I鈥檓 not always entirely convinced that the things that make me start worrying actually make sense.

While we wait for the next available orientation time slot, Rylee and I walk back through the climbing area, taking note of the hippie-ish, well-muscled climbers already clamoring up and across walls slanted outward from the floor like spider people. The highest of the walls are much higher than I could have imagined. Per their website, the Minneapolis Vertical Endeavors has some of the largest and tallest climbing walls in the country. I鈥檓 sure the tallest of these are over 200 feet high but am later told they are 60. Still, when I tell you I climbed certain heights, I don鈥檛 want you to take this initial miscalculation to mean that I really climbed only about three-tenths the height I say I did. I鈥檝e got things pretty well figured out up to 30 feet or so. After that, who knows.

We walk back to the lobby to await our orientation, and a three-year-old sits in the armchair next to me. 鈥淚鈥檓 three,鈥 she says, holding up the appropriate number of fingers. 鈥淗aha, acgh,鈥 I say, which is a non-word I had intended to be either 鈥渃ool鈥 or 鈥渙kay鈥 or something, only I鈥檓 never quite sure what to say to babies who start talking to me for no reason. Least of all this one, who I notice is wearing a climbing harness like the one I鈥檝e put on, only significantly smaller. 鈥淚s she climbing?鈥 I ask the girl鈥檚 mother, sitting nearby. 鈥淵es,鈥 she says, 鈥淪he loves it.鈥 I think, that is because she is too young to have developed an understanding of her own mortality, but I say, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 great.鈥 It is great. I鈥檓 not thrilled that little kids have started following me around on my fear-conquering missions, making a mockery of my pathetic efforts, but it is great. For her.

THE WOMAN WHO GIVES us our orientation starts it this way: 鈥淚 just want to remind you that climbing is dangerous.鈥 I hear everything else she says, but only as a modified echo of that first statement. 鈥淭hese ropes are checked twice a day,鈥 she says, 鈥but climbing is very dangerous.鈥 鈥淭o descend you simply lean back and let go, and the belay will lower you, but climbing is very dangerous.鈥 She asks for a volunteer on whom she can demonstrate the auto belays (which we鈥檝e chosen today both to save training time and because, though I love her, I do not trust Rylee to hold my life in her hands by a piece of string), and I raise my hand. The instructor shows me how to clip myself in, and it isn鈥檛 so bad. I could clip things onto my harness all day, no problem.

But then she leaves us, and I am left with only walls straight up. We鈥檙e in the easiest part of the whole place, with walls that are 鈥渏ust鈥 40 feet up and no weird angles or realistic rock jutting to get in the way of the ascent, and still, when I first try it, I only make it about eight or 10 feet up. And at first, that is more frustration than fear. The footholds and the handholds are too small for feet and hands. Why? I know real rock climbing does not have convenient grooves perfectly shaped to our needs, but I chose to do fake rock climbing for a reason. This irritates me until I decide to stop climbing, and that鈥檚 because I remember that I鈥檒l have to go back down again. My breath is heavy, half because of the sheer difficulty of climbing even so small a distance, and half because I am suddenly terrified. At only 10 feet, I know this is dumb. It just reminds me of what it feels like to be even higher. And it鈥檚 so hard to let go.聽

When I finally do take my hands off the little rubber pieces, I fall slowly to the ground, letting the belay pull me until I am sinking back onto the tar chips beneath me. I lie there for a couple of minutes. But then, maybe only because I am still clipped in and I paid money for this, I start climbing back up. I make it up 15 feet or so that time, then panic and let myself fall. The next time, I make it up about 25. I watch Rylee summit the 40-foot wall twice, even though I tell her to stop and come down the entire time.

I make another few half-hearted attempts, but I soon grow comfortable with the idea that 25 feet feels like my limit. It is very hard and very scary and though I have so much respect for the acrobats I see swinging around above me, I will never be one of them. I鈥檒l handle the ground-level end of things; you go on ahead. But still, I have this much to say: I climbed twice as high as that three-year-old. At least.聽

聽is a writer based in Minneapolis. She has a memoir coming out in early 2014.

Lead Photo: Carlos Caetano/<a href="http://w

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online