Winning, even when dreams don’t come true

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Every journey starts with a first step - including climbing Mt Everest. Make up your mind to heal, and then do everything you can to move towards that goal.

A while ago I wrote about the Boston Marathon and Mount Everest being common (im)possible dreams. I noted in that post that my neurologist had done the Boston Marathon (I think), and that my friend and I ‘mostly’ made it up the Nepalese mountain to reach Annapurna base camp, when we were both 19 years old, as part of our pseudo-Mt-Everest-dream.  The reason for the strange word choice of ‘mostly’ is that he made it up the mountain – I didn’t.  I thought it was worth writing about, because reaching that pinnacle-point was our (im)possible dream, the whole reason we were there, and my ‘failure’ to succeed turned out to be the most difficult – and wonderful – part of our trip. 

I used to have tonsilitis on a regular basis as a child, often a couple of times a year, every year, for several years in a row.  Doctors assumed that it was due to these recurring bouts of tonsilitis that I never grew as tall as my 6-foot-plus parents, or my sisters who, although they were younger, were far taller than me.  I’m telling you this seemingly sidetracked information, because, when I was on the mountain in Nepal and my throat started to hurt, I recognized the symptoms and knew that I was getting sick.

Having trekked for several days, we could calculate from our maps that we were about 2-3 days from our ‘summit’; the highest point you can get to before you switch from ‘hiking’ to ‘mountaineering’.   (I might not be right, or things may have since changed, but that’s my memory of the Annapurna-situation from the early 1990s.)  By that stage of the trek, we were already getting to a higher altitude and breathing was getting harder (obviously nothing compared to Mt Everest difficult, but the difference WAS noticeable).  Breathing at altitude makes you feel as if you have to breathe deeper and more often to get enough of the oxygen your moving body requires.  Having tonsilitis on the other hand, makes breathing raspy and painful, so you do your best to avoid it.

As stoic as I was trying to be, I was slowing us down, and my friend and I both realized I wasn’t going to make it up the mountain while I was sick.  We were only in Nepal for so many days and had a flight booked back to Australia, so there was no time to hang about and heal.  Whilst it seemed ‘obvious’ that he should go on while I stayed behind, we had made a pact at the beginning of the trip that we would never leave each other’s side.  I really hated the idea of not achieving my dream, but I hated it even more that I would be the reason that his dream was ruined.  I wasn’t too scared to stay put for 4-6 days (2-3 days up / 2-3 days down), but the idea of him travelling alone into the wilderness wasn’t ideal.  We’d been hearing gossip from other travelers that you might have to camp out in a tent on the last night, and that would make it harder if he had to carry all the equipment alone. 

The way I remember it, as we were deliberating, three New Zealand tourists met us on the path.  They were going up to Annapurna base camp and welcomed my friend to travel with them the next day.  It was agreed; he would go up the mountain, and I would stay behind.

We found a house to seek accommodation in.  The way it worked, back then at least, is that there were no hotels or formal lodges for the tourists who passed through.  Instead, regular homes let you stay in their spare bedroom for a night.  I guess it was a traditional Bed & Breakfast arrangement, or a precursor to AirBnB.  As two best buddies, and nothing more, we stayed the night, chastely side by side in our separate sleeping bags, BUT, because we had worn wedding rings to make it easier to share rooms when we travelled, our hosts assumed we really were married.  When he left to go up the mountain in the morning, and I stood glumly on the doorstep waving goodbye, our hosts thought he had abandoned me. 

What happened next was astounding: I was adopted.

Whilst I couldn’t be sure of who was related to who, or how, over the next few days one woman in the house taught me how to make the family’s noodles, whilst another showed me how to work the loom.  One of the kids took me to school where I spent a day playing with the kids, and the afternoon with one of the gentlemen helping mend a stone wall.  I even became a minor local celebrity when I drew some (iffy) sketches of some of the townspeople for them to keep (some of my diary sketches from the trip are reproduced below (and yes, I really do hold onto diaries for 30+ years!)). 

Sketches I made of Ghandruk, Nepal.

Each day that the family woke, and found me still there, the kinder they were, and the harder I tried, and failed, to explain that I was not staying forever. 

One of my favorite routines of the day involved the elders.  There were three grandparents, (or great-grandparents?), whose ‘job’ was to lie on a blanket in the sun, in the garden.  As the sun moved, and the shade fell on the blanket, it was everyone else’s job to carry them on their blankets to a new location.  It seemed an intensely respectful way to wordlessly say; “thank you for all that you have done over the years, now it’s your turn to rest, let me help you”.  One day, to my astonishment, the three elders stood up and started waving, clapping, singing and dancing.  I had barely seen them move since I’d arrived, and nothing this animated.  The rest of the family came out of the house and appeared equally bemused.  We all looked towards what they were so excited about… it was my friend coming down the mountain.

Everyone rushed to get him and forced us into an uncomfortable embrace.  My friend was whispering questions, and I was just saying “look like you’re happy to see me – act like you’ve decided to take me home.”  We all enjoyed a celebratory dinner that night, and my friend told me of his great joy at making it to the place we had dreamed of, and how he was lucky to have gone with new friends because he would have been underprepared if he’d gone alone.  I told him of all that I had been up to, and in the morning, it felt like the whole town came out to wave us good bye and good luck.

Was I sad that I didn’t make it up the mountain?  You bet.  BUT – and it’s a big, capital-letter but – what I got in return for ‘failing’ and being sick, was an experience unlike anything I could have imagined.  There were several amazing moments on our trip through India and Nepal, including, standing in front of the Taj Mahal and ‘reading’ the love poem of the building, with its unification of masculine and feminine forms (turrets and domes), as well as the incredibly moving night we spent at the ‘burning ghats’ on the Ganga (Ganges) River in Varanasi, where families come to cremate their loved ones, and send their ashes down the river and into the next life.  Being a Nepalese house-wife or adopted daughter, however, was perhaps the most special because it was the most personal and unexpected.

It was a long story (sorry), but it has a short moral; sometimes being sick is a gift.  Or perhaps; sometimes you win big when you fail – so, don’t be afraid to fail.

Take care and keep dreaming your (im)possible dreams; who knows where they might take you, Linda x

PS – Here is a blog post that reviews trekking in Nepal and includes several maps and pictures of Ghandruk (the village where I stayed), including this fabulous one:

Photo of Ghandruk, Nepal

PPS – if you were tempted to follow our footsteps, I also found this accommodation for you in Ghandruk. The company says it was established in 1991 (the same year we were there) and the accommodation “offers altitude, superb views of mountains and terraced fields, and plenty of roaming wildlife. From here, some continue on to Annapurna Base Camp” [note – SOME people continue on!!!]. It also mentions that the bedrooms have ensuites… which is certainly NOT how I remember it. Times have changed I guess – hopefully for the better for Blimlal (who I drew) and the rest of the Nepalese family members I stayed with. xx


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32 responses to “Winning, even when dreams don’t come true”

  1. Ana Daksina Avatar

    Like? Love!! I’ve been sick all my life, and along with being a poet (in our society, two deadly strikes against you), it’s been at times nothing short of all the hell I could hope to handle, and then some. But I just know that without those handicaps I would have turned into an obliviously entitled snob who really thought that the unfortunate were always to blame for their misfortunes, and that the unearned gift at birth of selective superintelligence made me “better.” At least I’m not that now.

    Great reminder, thank you.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Self-awareness is a form of super-power, and it sounds like you have that a’plenty – so yay you for being you AND knowing what that entails! Linda xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Ana Daksina Avatar

        🙏

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🥰

          Liked by 1 person

  2. Pequeño mundo (pk🌎) Avatar

    ♥️❤️💖 BEAUTIFUL

    Blessed and Happy afternoon 🌞 Greetings 🇪🇸

    Pk 🌎 David López

    Liked by 1 person

  3.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Such a beautiful story Linda!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you!! xx

      Like

  4. Purposeful Pathways Avatar
    Purposeful Pathways

    This is such a wholesome story! I could feel the warmth your received from the family you stayed with. My take home is “sometimes you win when you fail so do not be afraid of failing”

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      It was a true gift and I remain grateful 30 years later! xx

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Kymber Hawke Avatar

    What an amazing story! I was glued to it to see what would happen next! I love that bad things were turned to good. So wonderful, and an incredible journey!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you as always – I’m thrilled that you enjoyed the read! xx

      Liked by 1 person

  6. chattykerry Avatar

    What a shame to get sick just before your ascent but what a gift you received in return. You truly experienced what it is to live in the shadow of Everest. A unique travel tale that I thoroughly enjoyed!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you! I was ‘lucky’ in hindsight that the negatives turned into a positive (it could easily have gone another way – but I do think our approach to the situation always helps – and of course their generosity was outstanding!). xx

      Liked by 1 person

  7. ReneeBlareWrites Avatar

    What a beautiful twist to an amazing dream. It is funny how God takes what we want so badly and turns it into something we never expect.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      It was indeed a marvellous gift! Xx

      Liked by 1 person

  8. joannerambling Avatar

    What a wonderful story, seems to me you got sick in order to have the experience you did being part of this amazing family if only for a short while.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yeah, imagine! I’m still quite confounded by my own health – I don’t think I ever got tonsilitis again, it was like the 100th and LAST time!! xx

      Like

  9. Rosaliene Bacchus Avatar

    An amazing experience! Love the lesson about failure. Thanks for sharing 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      You’re welcome – it was potentially just a lucky gift, but a gift all the same. xx

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Wynne Leon Avatar

    What a great story! Sometimes the best things happen when we have to give up our dreams to make space for something else.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      It was a wonderful outcome… and it certainly made ‘losing’ out on my hopes and dreams so much more bearable! Thanks for visiting, you’re always welcome here. xx

      Like

  11. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    Lovely story, I guess you never know what is waiting for you if you just sit and think you’re doing nothing!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I wonder sometimes what I would have done if my friend hadn’t come back down that mountain… would I still be there weaving the loom??? xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

        Ha, maybe! Being very saddened (I’m not saying what you really felt about him), you might have been distraught for while and stuck there for awhile. Do a google search on Nepali widows, they don’t really have a good life. Can never marry again, no singing or dancing, “Some of them are also exploited as free or cheap labor or forced into prostitution to feed their children.” Oohhh.. not good.

        https://steemit.com/culture/@bindu/rediculous-hindu-tradition-in-nepal-widow-women-not-allowed-to-remary-after-her-spouse-death-and-required-to-wear-only-white

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          OK, good thing my buddy came back… no wonder the family was so stressed about me… lucky too that we weren’t lower down the mountain and or he would have been gone for more than a week… the mind boggles… sigh for Nepalese widows. 😔

          Liked by 1 person

          1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

            Yeah, boggle is right, really does make you wonder what they were thinking!

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              I’m not going to think about it anymore – it was a cherished memory in which I was loved like a daughter – nothing more! (Besides – I would have made my living out of sketching people if things took a turn for the worse.)

              Like

              1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

                Actually, when you think about (which you said you didn’t want to ….. errrmmmm sorry) we are so lucky to live in our culture. Yes, great story, there’s a real contrast you paint about expectation and reality.

                Liked by 1 person

                1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

                  🥰

                  Liked by 1 person

  12. Johnbritto Kurusumuthu Avatar

    It’s amazing how what seemed like a setback turned into such a rich and unique experience. Your ability to find beauty and meaning in what could have been seen as a failure is truly admirable.👌🎶

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you as always my friend – it really turned out to be a gift I had never anticipated, and I still remember it so strongly 30 years later! xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Johnbritto Kurusumuthu Avatar

        🤝🌷👏

        Liked by 1 person

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