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This is a map of ways I'd ascended through Lost Creek up till 2014. |
This was our trip Sept 16, 2023 |
We are nearing the top of the trail to the Sandstone North Peak, view W to "Tio Grande." |
Damsel (aka Pincushion) to ENE |
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Top 120' rap |
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I handline down |
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We used to crawl underneath this boulder |
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My helmet after the fall. My neck is still sore 2 months later. |
View back at where I fell. |
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Place with very long webbing strap to start rap. |
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Down last rap |
Last rap |
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Most people know that I have a serious problem with
distraction, when I’m attempting tasks that normally require the cerebellum. I
use the upper part of my brain (cerebrum) to stead for the missing part of my
cerebellum. That’s a very inefficient process. If something suddenly needs my
cerebrum – like intensive tasks that requires parsing of speech, or talking –
well, bad things can happen very quickly.
But can’t I just ask people to stop talking, when
I sense
that I’m getting overwhelmed? Simply put: no, not always. For one, I am
a friendly guy, and like talking. I normally deal with the situations
by being slightly in front of people when there is anything that
requires cerebellum.
The dangerous state comes on very quickly; and the feeling is euphoric. I can see that my current situation may be dangerous, but there is no alarm signal sent to my amygdala; potentially scary things seem scary only in an abstract way. And my ability to talk becomes very limited. The first time this happened to me (in a place that mattered) was in 2004; I was about to lunge, when I realized that lunging might cause my head to hit a branch. That seemed like a bad outcome, but there was no fear, and I lunged anyway, and knocked myself out, then tumbled 20 feet. What distracted me then was that I heard 3 separate conversations in the background, and there were questions I thought I had to answer. I learned how to give myself mental “pinches,” to filter out conversations, and that is *usually* enough.
On this day, I was so much enjoying conversation,
that I let my guard down. The lead set up to rap on a single strand,
but both strands were hanging down. I kept track of the strand the lead
took; but I got distracted, trying to answer questions, and there was a
seconds-long hole in my perception, during which the strands were
flipped. I could sense that I couldn't deal with the questions, and
wanted to leave before the I lost control of reality. And I went down
the wrong strand.
If you have ever had total anesthesia, you know there is a
moment when you are about to go under, when you feel euphoric, and all fear is
gone, and you don’t care about doing anything. That’s how it feels; and that
would be a bad feeling to have if you were driving a car, coming to a
stoplight.