Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Fuji. The whole thing.

Be warned. This post is 7 pages long. I recommend breaks to get snacks.

7/31/06

Let me first say that at the moment, I am in the most physically (and, until after my shower, mentally) exhausted state of my entire life. I’m not saying that as hyperbole. My legs this morning had stopped functioning altogether—I had to lift them out of bed with my own arms, and wait for the throbbing to die down before I could stumble the few feet to the bathroom. Last night if I had to turn over in bed, I had to grab the headboard and pull with my arms until I rolled one way or the other, as I couldn’t shift my hips to do it.

Fuji.

Right.

So we started off from Aoi Hall bright and early at about 9 a.m. Saturday morning. After piling into two vans, we drove to a mountain some distance from Okazaki—I don’t know where it was, exactly, but it was right on the coast, and we parked our car only a hundred feet or so from the ocean. It was great to see the sea again, Jersey girl that I am. The mountain itself was only 100 meters tall, but the way up was a set of stairs (which I later learned from Justin is called a “switchback trail”) which basically just wove up the mountain, turned 180 degrees, and wove up again. It was harrowing, it was hot, and I made it to the top only under duress. At that point I (and Declan) seriously questioned my ability to do Fuji after getting so sweaty and exhausted after just that little thing. We continued on, though, up to a little Shinto shrine dedicated to Tokugawa Ieyasu (founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate—he’s sort of Okazaki’s homeboy, since he was born there) and then headed back down.

After that followed this beautiful lagoon, which I don’t recall the name of and I’m not going to go dig for my notebook to look up. After that came another pit stop for lunch. I splurged a little (795 yen) and got una-don, short for unagi don, which means grilled eel over rice. The Japanese have a fixation with eel, especially in the summer. According to my teachers (and the basic Japanese concept of the food), when you eat it, it makes you strong and vigorous. So I figured, what the hell, I’m climbing Fuji and this stuff looks damn good. It was, in fact, delicious as expected. Midway through lunch, the heavens opened up and it began to pour. Undaunted, we sat there with our lunches and, when we finished and the rain hadn’t, we jogged back to the vans.

We also stopped at some gorgeous waterfalls at some point, though I’m so exhausted now that the details, order, and times are hazy at best.

Then came an absurdly long car ride to Fuji-san. I don’t really recall how long it took, but after one last pit-stop to buy water and other such stuff, we drove up the mountain. It was really incredible to watch the world fall away under us, and also to watch the trees thin steadily as we ascended. We drove halfway up, to Shin-go-gome, “New Number Five Station”, and parked there. At that height, the oxygen was thin enough that the trees had vanished altogether. We bought our walking sticks—I got two sets of bells for mine, one red and one yellow, and the Japanese Imperial flag attached to it for kicks—and gathered for our last group picture pre-climb. We stood under the map of the mountain, made our genki poses, and honestly thought this wouldn’t be that difficult. It was about 6 p.m.

This word will come up a lot, and sort of became the motto for our trip, so I will explain it now. Genki is a Japanese word which translates in English as “in high spirits,” “healthy,” “active,” “witty,” “loving life,” “light hearted,” “in good physical condition,” “perky,” and a multitude of other things. Basically, it doesn’t translate at all—but the one thing it really encompasses is a sort of feeling of “good living,” with both a good outlook and a good physical state. When you’ve recovered from an illness, people ask “now are you genki?” and you say “yep, I’m genki.” Old grandmothers in wheelchairs who poke fun at younger people and laugh loudly are genki. It’s all a matter of perspective, but basically it’s the physical and psychological states of your existence.

Everybody started off with the motto “genki de!” which basically means “do it genki­-ly!” or “be genki!” We sort of yelled it at each other over the first stretch of the climb, which only took maybe half an hour.

It is, however, incredibly difficult to be sprightly when you are climbing up the soil of Mt Fuji, as it is entirely composed of PEBBLES. You heard me, pebbles. As Fuji is a volcano (still considered active, I’d like to note), the slopes in every direction are made up entirely of loose pebbles. Very, very loose pebbles. The paths for hiking (which are basically stretches with rope on one side and painted arrows on the few large rocks, not even paths in any sense) have been trampled enough so that some small stretches are just loose dirt, but the vast majority is made up of small rocks which slide the moment you get your feet on them. Not friendly.

That was our first taste of what we were in for that night. We trudged (and slipped) up to station 6, a supposed 20-minute journey which took us about 30. Our backpacks were heavy with water and high-calorie food we’d brought along to keep us going, the sun was beating down on us, there was almost no UV layer at that height, and we were already uncomfortable. The next stretch of trail was the longest, labeled to take 60 minutes.

So Declan met us at the sixth stop, told us we all looked capable of making the trip and he wasn’t going to pull anybody (to my astonishment, as I really didn’t think I was capable of making it) and bid us farewell. Our guide, Chris, stayed in the back of the line and helped out the weaker among us, namely me.

I really hated that second stretch of trail. There wasn’t any beaten dirt on the paths, only pebbles, and the light was beginning to fail. When I could find a large, solid rock to hoist myself up on I was okay, but otherwise the slipping action gave literal meaning to the phrase “two steps forward, one step back.” Psychologically, it was devastating. I was getting almost nowhere for all my work, sliding all over the place, and my backpack was laden with five liters of water, a sweatshirt, a heavy rain jacket, rain pants, and a metric asstonne of chocolate and nuts. Cursing and already determined to resign, I kept at it. Chris took my backpack from me at one point and the lightened load made it easier to go up. After about 70 minutes (surprisingly close to the marked time), I made it to Shin-nana-gome, New Number Seven Station.

There was applause and cheering as I stepped onto New 7.

I don’t know exactly what happened in that moment, but something inside me shifted. Chris asked me if I wanted to go on; the guy who ran the station (where you can stop and rest for the night, especially if the altitude is getting to you) said the next stretch was treacherously steep, and while there were slightly more solid rocks, it was by and large pebbles. I looked at the map; it only took 40 minutes. I told Chris that I would try “one more station.”

After a half-hour rest at New 7, we set off for 7 (for reference, there was a “New 7” and a “7”, followed by 8, 9, 9.5, then the top.) The climb was almost as agonizing as the one before, but this time another girl joined me in back, and having somebody to chat with, albeit only in Japanese as she didn’t speak any English, was relaxing. Chris stayed with us, at what he considered a nice, leisurely pace, and he carried her backpack that stretch.

About ten minutes away from New 7, I looked back, and told Chris I wanted to give up. The soil up there was treacherous, the light was gone, and I had slipped and crushed my knee against a rock. He looked me square in the eye and said “You’re not going back, because that would mean I would have to go back, and I’m not turning around. Keep going, you can quit up at 7.” We made it to 7. Another round of whooping greeted us as the other girl, Chris, and I made it to the station.

I don’t know whether it was the lack of oxygen, the cooling air from the sun finally setting, the cheers, or the psychological aspect of it all, but whatever had shifted back at New 7 finally stuck. The mountain wasn’t going to beat me, even if I broke my leg trying. So after another half-hour rest, we headed up to station 8.

The soil by that point had turned into unpredictable, uneven rocks, some of which were loose. Once in a while we had to go hand-over-hand to lift ourselves up. The girl in back with me was having a real hard time on the way up to 8, and by the time we got there, the altitude had hit her—we were about 2.5 kilometers above the ground—and she was out of commission. We took an extended 1-hour stay, and by then the temperature had plummeted to freezing. All the cold weather gear came out, and we huddled on benches and danced around to keep warm. We had to leave the other girl there for the night, and they gave her some oxygen and sent her to bed. Chris told us we would hit the top, maybe wait for the sunrise, turn right around, and come get her on our way down. This disheartened everyone—not only did we all want to see sunrise, we wanted to stay up there to get the brands on our walking sticks saying we’d made it to the top. Chris told us that was a no-go, and got angry and called us all narrow-minded. I understood how important it was that we came and got her, but we had all really been banking on those brands and the sunrise—it was a damper on the trip.

In any case, after about two hours in which we made sure the other girl was settled and okay, we headed up. It was only 30 minutes to 9, and though I took up the rear yet again, Mark joined me as the altitude got to his head as well. I was a little light-headed, but determined to at least make it to station 9. The soil by now had turned entirely to large, hard rocks, with a light dusting of loose pebbles to make you slip, and the light was gone entirely. Out came my dinky free flashlight, which was enough to let me see what was going on around me, and up we went. The height difference in most of the rocks (which, by the way, were in no way flat, even, or remotely near passable) was about two feet, so a good amount of the trip was hand-over-hand. Luckily we had downed most of our water and donned our cold-weather gear by that point, so our packs were lighter. I also discovered that for some reason, my hands have some unnatural ability to keep perfectly warm without gloves even in sub-freezing weather. When I’m hiking, at least—other times they’re frozen solid. As I hadn’t brought gloves with me, though, it was a useful trick.

We made it to 9. I was going to conquer that goddamn mountain if it killed me.

By 9 we were well above the highest part of the cloud line. We had literally walked through the clouds—the fog in the pictures is the clouds. By station 9, we looked up and saw stars.

I can’t describe that sky to somebody who’s never seen it before. There was no light pollution at all. The headlamps and flashlights turned off, and we all tilted our heads back and saw the most beautiful, clearest night sky any of us had ever seen in our lives. It was like dust across a black tile. There was not a breath of room which was not covered in stars. It was easily the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen in my life. We were at the top of the world, and could see the entire universe stretched out before us. In every direction, there was nothing but stars, stars everywhere. After our break, though, Chris told us we were heading out. It was only maybe midnight, and the sunrise wasn’t until 4:15—we were making good time. Unfortunately, it was also well below freezing, and sitting still was enough to freeze every extremity into stasis. Talking, though, kept our spirits up, and I made friends with a guy named Jonah, from North Carolina. We talked long and hard about how much we would pay right then for lobster bisque, or my mom’s clam chowder, or his mom’s biscuits and gravy, or a half-pound of bacon, nice and fried and fatty. We were all starving, frozen, and getting a little loopy from the thin air.

We also hit a major philosophical point that high up; we realized that at the most transcendentally blissful moments in life, the feeling is so intense that all you can really say is “…yep.” It’s a feeling of rightness. If anything it’s a little disappointing, because you expect the chorus of angels and the feeling of floating, but when you do hit those moments it’s that feeling of perfect rightness, and if anything you just become… calm.

After our philosophical waxings, we started up again to 9.5. The trip to 9.5 was probably the hardest on the group. You could literally see the mountain top from that point, even in the dead of night. We had gotten above the cloud line. Above us, the headlamps of the handful of hikers trudging slowly up to the crater looked like stars climbing into the sky. The oxygen, however, was close to nothing that high in the air. Mark started feeling light-headed and took frequent breaks. What was marked as a 30-minute trip took us closer to an hour, and even though I was feeling more genki than I ever had in my life—though I honestly have no idea where all my energy came from—I stuck back with Mark to cheer him up. I felt compelled, since I knew how mentally devastating it was to be the very last in the group, trailing behind with nobody but Chris, who was obviously not having a hard time doing this mountain, to stay with you. It was better to share agony than anything else. It worked; he hiked through the nausea and headache, and finally we made it to 9.5.

While stopping at 9.5, we could see the top of the mountain, and a loose cluster of people passing us and heading up, headlamps on as they weaved up the tip of the mountain. Jin, Sampath, Eric, and I all shared a sort of touching moment as we laughed (probably from lack of oxygen) and thanked each other for doing this together. We were going to make it for dawn, with time to spare. Below us, a huge group of hikers had the same idea as us, and was moving steadily along the trail, their headlamps looking like a trail of fireflies as they wove upward. The piece of plastic holding my Japanese Imperial flag rolled up was slipping, and the flag was close to unfurling; Jin told me that anybody who unrolled their flag before they hit the summit was to be beaten to death with everyone else’s walking stick. I laughed and promised to keep it rolled.

The last stretch of trail was a 45-degree angle ascent straight to the top.

We headed out, and for once I wasn’t in the tail of the group. I was going to conquer this mountain, goddamn it, and I could see the huge group of “fireflies” (really a Japanese hiking group) coming up on us without stopping. I paused once or twice for water, and to get some strength back in my thighs—the entire way up that last stretch of trail consisted of planting the walking stick, one leg up, then hoisting the rest of your body. Plant, leg, hoist. Plant, leg, hoist. With the top in sight there was almost nothing that could stop me. I was near the top of Mount Fuji. I was near the top of Mount Fuji.

I was at the top of Mount Fuji.

The Torii gate greeted us, and with Jonah only a few paces in front of me, I set foot on even ground. The wind whipped at us, and for once I didn’t give a damn. I threw my arms up and yelled “I DID IT!”, my walking stick in the air. When I found the others huddled against a rock to keep from the cold, I kept saying “dekita, hontou ni dekita” (I did it, I really did it) in a daze. There was laughter and yelling and chatting from every human being up there—probably close to a hundred within a minute or two of my arrival—and we all curled up against each other to keep warm. Spirits were so high that even though we felt the cold, when we complained we were laughing. I curled up with Jin on one side and Jonah on the other, and when we saw Chris reach the top we all cheered, though I don’t know who was with him. I unfurled my flag.

Here’s an interesting tidbit—you can get perfect cell phone reception at the top of Mount Fuji. So perfect, in fact, that at one point we had seen a Japanese man talking on his cell during the ascent. Chris pulled out his phone, called the girl we’d left behind, and found out she was feeling fine. We could stay for sunrise after all.

After about an hour of huddling and feeling the coldest and happiest we had in our lives, we set out around the crater. At one point my flag and my bells came off. I caught the flag, but not the bells. At that point, I realized how stupid the ornamentation on that staff was, as the staff itself had saved my life more times than I could count—I would have cracked my head open on a rock if I hadn’t had the staff to support me when I slipped.

We hiked around the edge of the crater, and made it to an edge with a two-foot-wide flat path before the sheer drop down. We climbed up from the path and found small places to sit on the stones, and watched the sun come up.

It was something I can’t even put into words. My camera’s final set of batteries died before the actual sun came out, but I didn’t care—I was there to see it myself, and I will always remember what it looked like. The sky turned millions of shades of blue and purple and orange, and finally, through the clouds, a blood-red ball slowly peeked out.

When the sun finally lifted above the clouds, we were moved, but glad to be moving back to the station and down the mountain. After a pause to get our sticks branded—the top stations opened earlier than the rest!—we started back down. I found my yellow bells, though alas, I never did find the red ones again. Coming down the first stretch of trail, we passed a long line of people heading up. Some Japanese women in their sixties or better were hiking up, and though they were having a tough time of it, we greeted them with “Ohayou gozaimasu!” (Good morning!) and “ganbatte, kudasai!” (Please, do your best!). They laughed and thanked us. One woman was having a hard time, and when I bid her do her best, she said she wasn’t sure it was enough. I told her “watashi ga dekitara dare de mo dekimasu” (if I can do it, anybody can) and she laughed. I think that kept her going.

The first walk down was not too bad, if a little difficult when it came to foot placement. I’m not that brave when it comes to heading face-first down a 3-kilometer-high mountain, so I stepped gingerly and took my time.

Beyond 9.5, though, the trail sucked.

The slopes got slippery with pebbles, and, as Declan warned us, everybody fell at least 3 times. All things told, on the way down I fell an even 10. I was doing fine until we got to station 7.5, when all of a sudden the exhaustion, altitude, hunger, and sudden temperature change got to me, and the world swam. When I sat down I held my head in my hands, and the entire world lurched. I asked somebody to call for Chris, and he asked me if I was feeling nauseous. I told him I was, and he commandeered a plastic bag. I sat there with it under my chin for a while, unable to vomit, until Sampath, Jin, and Eric, who were sitting next to me, started talking—deliberately, I think—about sausages slathered in grease. It worked; I vomited. When the world stopped spinning, I paid 200 yen to use the bathroom (a really cruel 200 yen, as the most common complaint of altitude sickness is diarrhea, and the people running the station know that), and when I came out, everybody but Chris had left. We headed down.

The first part of that next stretch of trail sucked, as my stomach was still unsettled and I kept losing my balance. After that, though, I did alright. Eventually my genki came back to me and I got the hang of sliding down the pebbles, which had reclaimed the trail by that point. Thanks to Jin, I learned that the trick was to either plant your feet sideways to ease stopping, or to dig your heels in and slide with each step. I took the latter, and was fine most of the way down (except for the vast majority of my slips, which, to be honest, everyone but Chris had).

We made it down. Christ, we made it down. When the sun was up, I could tell why Declan had called Mount Fuji a “dirty, dusty, piece of shit mountain”—it really was. Up close, it is the ugliest thing I have ever seen. The dirt is all bright red and black, and it’s really just not attractive. It looks like the earth vomited, and Fuji is what happened. From a distance, it’s beautiful and symmetrical—up close you just want to put the thing out of its misery.

On the way down, I totaled 10 slips, five shards of rock embedded in my hand (the size of splinters and pitch black, all in my left hand as my right had the walking stick), and a whole lot of souvenir bruises. By the time we hit the last trail between station 6 and 5, a hearty 5-minute jog of joy back down (though, prudently, I took my time on the pebbles), the pain really started sinking into my legs. The entire descent had been murder on my knees, especially since I bruised my right one hard on the way up. My thighs and hips had gotten the best workout, and I craved a double bacon cheeseburger. Except for a quarter-box of Pocky (total 100 calories) at station 9.5, I hadn’t eaten since we’d hit the summit. Lines of Japanese schoolchildren passed us on their way up, and greeted us with “Konnichiwa” (Good day) which we responded to in kind. One boy asked me “Tsukaremashita ka?” (Are you tired?) to which I responded “Hontou ni tsukaremashita.” (I am incredibly tired.)

We took our post-climb picture, in which everyone looked satisfied (if not genki exactly) and climbed into the vans. I slept on the way back and dreamed that the whole Fuji climb and descent was really a dream. We stopped at some point to get lunch—I got what was billed (falsely) as carbonara, but didn’t really mind the disappointment, as it was food. I also fell getting out of the van, since my legs weren’t working. I limped the rest of the way to and from the car.

The driver dropped me off at my apartment. I think it was about 1 p.m. Sunday. I grabbed my things, thanked him, entered my apartment, said “good night” to my roommate, pulled off my sweat-stained clothes, and collapsed into bed where I slept, with only intermittent waking to roll myself over by my arms, until 10 a.m. That’s 21 hours of sleep, uninterrupted.

So what did I learn on Fuji-san? I learned a hell of a lot about myself, though that’s mostly private. I learned that when people are struggling, they want somebody to struggle with them, not a light at the end of the tunnel. I learned that saying “one more station” can propel you to the top of the mountain. I learned that a little bullying can go a long way to making somebody improve. I learned never to stop and pick up a 500-yen coin that fell out of your pocket on the downslope (fell right on my ass). I also learned that it is, in fact, coldest before the dawn, by about 10 degrees Celsius. I learned what a night sky looks like, and the first sunrise. I learned that ornamentation is stupid, though the Japanese might not agree with me on that. I also learned that we try too often to replace our own memories with tangible evidence, and that maybe running out of batteries on my camera was a good thing. I stopped thinking about which lens to use, and focused entirely on that ball of a sun, and the people around me, and the people at home whom I love.

I wish you could’ve been there to see it with me.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am ridiculously happy for and proud of you. Incidently, I sent your letter off today before I saw this; so take the sentiments of the first few paragraphs on how you're amazing and multiply by Erica's favorite number, pi-billion.

2:02 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow, what an experience... I'm so proud of you and glad that you were able to push yourself to the top and learn about yourself through the process. It really sounds like such an important and cathartic experience for an individual, even if Fujisan is a piece of shit mountain up close. ;) I miss you Meresan! Your entries are quite eloquent, but nothing compared to the real deal.

4:01 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

quite a touching story. well done.

11:29 PM  

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