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when i was twenty-six years old i decided to hike the pacific crest trail or at least
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a big chunk of it that time i wasn't living a life that you would guess that
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somebody uh... you know we decide to go i think this wilderness trail by herself i
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was very much at what i think of as the sort of bottom of my life
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my mother had died very suddenly cancer
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about four years before she was forty five years old
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she thought she had a bad cold
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it quickly uh... progressed to something that we thought was worse we never
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dreamed it was cancer but um... we soon found out that indeed it was
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and he died seven weeks later uhÖ till the day after her diagnosis
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i was really at this moment that I decided to hit the pacific crest trail
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I guess sort of lost
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my family had really disintegrated in the wake of my momís death
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i had tried to keep us all together but i didn't really have the sort of
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sustaining power
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that uh... a mother has and that i didn't know was there until after my mom died
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I had been married at the time
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To someone I cared for and loved very deeply that i just was really too young
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to be married and certainly too young to nurture that kind of commitment to bond
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given my own grief and what was happening in my life
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and so
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I, I drive to
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oregon
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and catch a plane to Los Angeles and catch a ride
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to the town of Mojave, California
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and it was there that I began my hike in the mojave desert
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i was out there by myself
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i'd never gone backpacking before
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not one night
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and
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I
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didn't, uh
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really listen to any of the warnings that that people had given me about
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Weight and how is really important to just be very very very careful
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about what to take
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so i get out there and i have you know um... ridiculous things like a saw
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that i don't know what exactly
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i was going to
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to cut but i had that
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i have many other things
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and uh...
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i could really not actually lift my backpack i couldn't lift it even
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like a centimeter at all
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and yet i had to carry it uh... you know eleven hundred miles to the wilderness
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by the end it's like day three i was literally um...
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bleeding from like
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various places on my body where the backpack made contact with my with my
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shoulders and my hips and
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my feet uh... were were terribly blistered and
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it was agony on what i said when i wasn't thinking about those very
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immediate concerns what was really happening inside of me as i was
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essentially
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coming to terms with my life
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and things came up that were surprising uh...
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of course my mother's
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death was this
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huge thing uh... for me and i certainly thought about her a lot on the trail but
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i also thought sometimes negative things about her you for the first time I was
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really in touch with
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my sense of rage about her death
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and of course it doesn't make any sense that i would blame her of course my
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mother wanted to live
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i realize that
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you know later that that i needed to to do that to get to the other side
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Of my grief
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and there is no other side where you arrive on the shore and then you walk away and youíre clean
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But I certainly
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got to the other side of something so i could go on
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and i think that um... the trail enabled to me to do that. i finished my trip
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in a town called cascade locks on the columbia river
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it's just east of
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uh... the city of portland oregon right now live
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and there's this place called the bridge of the gods that spans the columbia
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river and it's this beautiful bridge
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uh... i knew
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All through my hike really once that this is my destination and i wasn't
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gonna stop so i got there
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by the time i reached that place
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I felt uh...
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not transformed in this kind of neat
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Arc of a way
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but i think that we we sort of
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hope for a look for when we take its a big journey such as the one i took
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but I felt like i would never be at that bottom again
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at that place i was
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when i began now i'm forty-three I finished hiking the trail
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two days before may twenty seventh birthday
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and yet you know i looked back and i can see that everything that i am
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is born of
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everything that i gathered back uh... to myself on that trip