Death Valley Defiance
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On my third day in Death Valley I hiked the Golden Canyon/Gower Gulch Loop. I had already hiked for 3 hours and it was the hottest part of the day when I came to the base of a steep climb against a chalk-white canyon wall. I almost turned back, but something clicked.
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Full of anger, sadness, shame and fear I started climbing. I began at the beginning of the relationship and called up every memory from the big events to the most intimate details to the brutal ending... AND I kicked the ass of every last one of them! I was relentless, like the steep path in front of me. I cried. I climbed. I felt the bittersweet of each painful, fond memory and I let go, one-by-one, step-by-step. In my defiance, I felt great compassion for myself.
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This was my reward. What a view. I felt strong and held at the top of that canyon.
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Everything was silent. There was only the sun and the wind and the bare rock.
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I didn't see any other people. I was alone with Death Valley.
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The experience was cathartic.
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When I got back to my campsite I was feeling good. Over fifty teenagers had arrived while I was gone. They were preparing to leave on a three-week backpacking trip, in groups of ten, the next morning. There was a lot of buzzing youthful energy around the camp.
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I grilled a small pork loin and my friend, John -- who I had met on my first night in the desert just as the full moon was rising, joined me for dinner and brought whiskey.
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We drank hot toddies, talked about relationships, and watched the beautiful high school fireflies packing their sacks, brushing their teeth, writing in their journals, preparing for sleep.
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