Why the John Muir Trail?
Since making it known earlier this year that I planned to hike a 160-mile section of the John Muir Trail, I have been asked โwhy??โ enough times that it feels right to propose a theory for such unusual behavior. Here is mine. My father died when I was five. By the time I turned eight my mother had had a few boyfriends (TMI?), each wanting to ingratiate himself more than the next by playing father-figure. Baseball games, a trip to the Treasure Island Naval Station, you get the picture. The one activity that stuck, the one I loved more than any, was being out in nature, hiking in the hills, usually on Mt. Tamalpais in Marin County. At age eight I wasnโt much of a backpacker, though. Overnights were a grueling affair though for some reason my motherโs current beau thought it would be brilliant to hike the John Muir Trail and take me with him. This insanity (the famous trail runs 215 miles) was apparently accepted by my mother as normal, so off we went in his 1949 Buick, itself a sketchy proposition.
I recall the dread as if it happened yesterday: from the beginning of the Muir Trail (a.k.a. the โJMTโ) in Yosemite Valley we hiked as far as the top of Nevada Falls (all of 3 miles?) and Iโm pretty sure I complained the whole way. I had never before carried a heavy pack into darkness. How could it be right for this to persist for a further three weeks? Vocalization of my angst was likely too much for my โadultโ companion (aged 22?) so we returned to the trailhead, got in the Buick and drove a hundred miles or so to Devilโs Postpile National Monument, the next spot where the JMT came close to a road. Ugh. Same false start, same retreat, same shame. I was eight, and had utterly failed to hike the John Muir Trail. How could I face my classmates in September? In the end we did salvage a triumph on that trip, climbing Mt. Whitney in one day. That, it turned out, would become an important piece of my identity.
Fast forward a half century and Iโm watching a documentary about hiking the JMT and I suddenly realized that not only might I be able to achieve it today (OK barely, on the other side of the age spectrum), but that what Iโd feared then, and had been fabulously unequipped to do, I actually looked forward to doing. And so it happened that one day in January I decided to really hike the John Muir Trail.
Maybe youโll see all of this as my need to settle an old personal score. Maybe youโll be charitable and see it as fulfilling, at last, the expectation of my momโs boyfriend (he became, in later years, a close friend). Or maybe youโll see this as a needed vacation. Whatever it is, I will be doing what I found I loved so long ago but lacked the tools to achieve. And in any event, I deeply appreciate the support youโve shown for this walk in the woods, and for our wonderful Junior Docent program. Remember, our Junior Docent give tours to kids who are eight years old. Fifty years from now, theyโll remember those tours like they happened yesterday.
Above photo of Ted Bosley was taken in Yosemite Valley, 2013.
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