We've been climbing in seventh grade. Metaphorically, as we scaled the heights of the school year, but also literarily, as we ended the year with a reading of Peak, by Roland Smith, and then a supplementary non-fiction Everest account, Within Reach, and this video story about an expedition that flew a hot air balloon over Everest, so we could get more insight into stuff like how noisy the streets of Kathmandu are, what yaks look like and how a Gamow bag works. (I also read No Summit Out of Sight, by Jordan Romero, but didn't have time this year to share that with my students. Next year I might swap it in for the other one, because I do like the idea of comparing a fictional account with a non-fiction one, and Jordan is closer to my students' age than Mark Pfetzer, who wrote Within Reach.)
I'm not sure why I have, in the past few years, developed such an interest in Everest. It's not because I want to climb mountains. I'm scared of heights. I can hardly read about the ladders in the Khumbu Icefall without covering my eyes. I get breathless and shivery as I go through these adventures vicariously. Plus, it's expensive to climb Everest. Even if I had that kind of money, there are so many other things I'd do with it.
Partly it's because I've fallen in love with Nepal. I've never been there, but I feel as though I have from all the books I've read. We were reading Peak in April 2015 when the big earthquake took place there. At that point my students remembered our 2010 earthquake very well, and they, and I, were struck hard by the event. We read articles together and lamented what those people were going through, and my kids had a bake sale to raise money, which they sent to a high school friend of my husband's who was working in Nepal. The accounts I read (and they were many) sounded just like ones from Haiti, except that in Nepal it was cold; my students and I couldn't imagine. I cried, imagining.
Probably it's mostly the metaphor. Everest is the ultimate symbol of an almost unattainable goal. George Mallory is famously supposed to have said, when asked why he wanted to climb the mountain, "Because it's there." But cavalier as Mallory was about it, plenty of people have not come back from their attempt to summit. Mallory himself was one of them. He disappeared during his climb in 1924 and his body was found 75 years later, in 1999. There are about 200 dead bodies still on the mountain, lying where they fell, still dressed in their brightly colored climbing clothes. Because of the cold, their corpses don't decay. (Here's more of the "gruesome truth" about that.)
In addition to being difficult, climbing Everest is about preparation, about sitting around a lot waiting for things to happen, and about being stopped by circumstances completely outside your control. You're only on the summit a few minutes; those few minutes are fueled by years of fund-raising, exercising, acclimatization, and scaling lesser peaks. And chances are good you won't make it at all. You might not get there because of sickness, someone else's foolishness, political upheaval, frostbite, bad weather, or dozens of other problems large and small. One guy in Within Reach dropped his mitten and couldn't get it back; that put an end to his summit attempt.
Sounds like life, doesn't it?
(Also, in climbing as in life, you definitely won't make it without other people's help. These books and the video all explore the role of the Sherpas, who work harder than the climbers from outside for less recognition.)
Early in our reading of Peak this year, we read Irene Latham's poem "The World According to Climbers" in The Poetry Friday Anthology for Middle School as our poem of the day (we read four poems a week, Monday through Thursday, and then listen to a song together on Fridays).
Could it be that there's a middle school English teacher who doesn't have this book yet? If so, you should really go order it right now. I'll wait.
The World According to Climbers
by Irene Latham
They place their trust in a firm
handshake, steel-toed boots
and hats with wide brims.
Rope fibers groan as they cling
like beads of dew on mutton grass.
They don't lament the lack of wing,
only the fact that they can't fly
without them. They forget why,
shift their focus to how.
They carry on. There is no
such thing as tomorrow.
Irene's poem became a touchstone for us as we continued to read the book. I would often say, or one of the students would, "Hey, that reminds me of 'The World According to Climbers.'" An example is when Peak's mom tells him, in a somber call on a satellite phone, that he has to become selfish to succeed in summiting Everest. If he doesn't focus, he won't make it. She explains how she had to give up climbing because once she became a mom, she found her focus divided. (And that's a class discussion waiting to happen!) We talked about how climbing happens step by step.
The PFAMS suggests asking, "What risks are worth taking and what risks are not?" Everest puts that question front and center, but my kids face risks in their lives in Haiti all the time. In some ways, they are far less sheltered than American kids their age, living in a country with few safety features. In other ways, they are super-sheltered, at least some of them - check out this post to see what I mean. Talking about risk is always an interesting thing with these students.
I wrote to Irene and told her what her poem had come to mean to me and to the class, and she wrote back with some more background. She sent me the photo she used as inspiration when she wrote "The World According to Climbers."
She was writing poems at the time using photos of United States National Parks. (This one is from Mesa Verde National Park.) She intended to put them in a book but never found a publisher. She also said that her brother used to be a climber, "so I watched and worried and marveled over his adventures many times!" (Now he's become a cyclist, which I guess is marginally safer.) My students love it when I tell them the authors we read are friends of mine. Thanks for sharing all of this with us, Irene, and giving me permission to share it with my blog readers, too!
So we made it to the summit of our school year - today is the last day of classes, and we have three half days next week of exams and then all the graduations. In my newly-acquired free time in the next couple of weeks, maybe I'll write my own climbing poem. When you get to the summit of Everest, you have to head back down right away after posing for a few pictures; the human body can't survive for long at that altitude, called the "Death Zone." My mountain is a little less extreme. For right now, I'm just going to enjoy the view from up here a little longer before I head back down to the valley and start gathering supplies and strength to climb again next year.
Here's today's roundup.
14 minutes ago
7 comments:
Your post today is so rich, I don't know where to start. First, I think I must now read Peak.
It has triggered a memory from my earlier teaching years.
When I was a classroom teacher, near the beginning of the school year I would take my grade 3, 4, & 5 students to an indoor climbing centre called The Edge. Some would get to the top of a climb right away and then go and try a more challenging one. Other students would tackle the same climb numerous times before reaching the top. There was always much cheering and applause whenever someone made it there. We learned a lot about each other. Students who seamed very quiet and reserved would wow the rest of the class. One year I had a new student from Vietnam who didn't have much English. When she climbed up those walls without hardly trying, she became a class rock star. The Edge became the metaphor for the rest of our school year. Whenever a student was struggling with something, other students would say, "You can do this, Remember The Edge." (I didn't start that line, they came up with it all by themselves)
Always important to figure out where to place your trust and where to focus your attention, for sure.
It's hard for me to imagine being that single-minded!
I can imagine dropping a crucial mitten.
Thanks for this! Enjoy the view.
I was a rock climber in another lifetime. I summited Third Flatiron above Boulder and Seneca Rocks in WV. There is so much truth to the fact that you can't reach any summit on your own. Even if you are climbing solo, there are the ropes and other equipment. When you climb with others, trust is a necessary component of every climb.
Thanks for another peek (peak :-) into your rich, rich classroom. Lucky kids.
You had me at, "poem as a touchstone". Actually, you had me before that but those words just glow! There is so much to love about this rich and beautiful post. I love the book Peak! What a wonderful book for 7th grade. I'm sure your students have learned and grown and stretched with the story. How wonderful!
You know, there are international schools in Nepal? Planting a seed here...in case you are interested in teaching there someday.
Thanks for the links and the thoughtfulness of all your words. I'll be going back to investigate. I saw a story about climbing Everest just this weekend. I wonder if your students would be interested in the literal and/or metaphorical meaning?
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/three-more-dead-everest-amid-concerns-about-congestion-near-summit-n1009586
Cheers, Ruth
I share your fascination with Everest, but would never be a climber. Instead I simply marvel at the sheer will it takes to summit that mountain. We have a friend who summited more than once - carrying camera gear without oxygen! He's clearly got the lungs of a dear.
I liked this timely climbing adventure you took us on via your students Ruth, I think they are very fortunate to have the flood of literary works you are sharing with them. Sometimes we embark on physical climbs that test all our endurance and emotions, but sometimes life takes us on climbs that test all these experiences and can be just as traumatic a rollercoaster ride as the physical climb. Enjoy the descent this summer.
Ruth, I love the kind of teacher you are and the kind of HUMAN you are! Thank you for including my poem in your work with students... I'm honored and grateful. So many peaks you've shown us... keep climbing, my friend! Rooting for you all the way. xo
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