People always talk about what you can't take home with you after a NOLS course. You can't take home the backpack, or at least it has no place in your daily life. You can't take home the rations and if you did, your friends wouldn't eat them. You can't take home the mountains. We seem to have to get rid of all our connections to this place and our experiences here. It's frustrating can can be depressing.
This essay is about what you can take home. What you can take home, and what, if you work at it, can be more important than any of those things you have to leave behind.
Let's look at what we've really been doing out here. We've been organized, lived out of backpacks the whole time, and mostly knew where everything was. We've been thorough: Counted every contour line on the map and put every little piece of trash in a bag. We've been prepared: At this moment, every one of us knows where his or her raingear is, have taken care of ourselves, and been in touch with basic survival tasks. We've taken chances with other people, entrusted them with our lives and seen no reason not to grow close to them. We've persevered and put our mind to things that never seemed to end, learned to use new tools and techniques, and taken care of the things we have with us. We've lived simply.
These are the things you can really take home. Together they comprise the set I call "mental hygiene," as if we needed to take care of our minds the way we take care of our bodies. Here they are again, one by one.
Organization: The mountains are harsh, so you need to be organized. But that other world is much more complex, and even harsher in ways that aren't always as tangible as cold, wind and rain. Being organized can help you weather its storms.
Thoroughness: Here it is easy to see the consequences of leaving things only half done, until you find yourself buried under a pile of ongoing projects with no direction.
Preparedness: Out here you've only had to be prepared for every eventuality of weather; but in that other world you have to be prepared for every eventuality - period. There are no rules, it happens, and only the prepared are not caught off balance.
Take Care of Yourself: Do it even more aggressively than you do it out here. The environmental hazards are even greater: crowding, noise, schedules. Take time to be alone and think. Never underestimate the power of being near beauty, be it a flower, music, a person, or just dinner.
Stay in touch with Basics: Continue to cook your own food and consciously select the place you sleep at night. Take care of your own minor injuries and those of your friends. Learn about how the complex vehicles and tools you use work. The other world is far more distracting and seeks to draw you away from the basics.
Keep taking risks with People: Your own aliveness is measured by the aliveness of your relationship to others. There are so many more people to choose from in that other world, and yet somehow we get less close. Remember that the dangers are still present; any time you get in a car with someone you are entrusting that person with your life. Any reasons that seem to crop up not to get close. examine very carefully.
Remember: You can let go and do without seemingly critical things. Here it has only been hot showers, forks and a roof overhead. But anything can be done without; eventually for us all it is a person that we have to do without, and then it is especially important to remember that having to do without does not rule out joy.
Persevere at difficult things: It may not be as concrete as a mountain or as immediately rewarding as cinnamon rolls, but the world is given to those who persevere. Often you will receive no support for your perseverance because everyone else is to busy being confused.
Continue to learn and use new techniques: Whether it is a computer or an ice cream maker, you know that simply because you haven't seen it before doesn't mean you can't soon be a pro. Remember that the only truly old people are the ones who've stopped learning.
Take care of things: In that other world it's easy to replace anything that wears out or breaks, and the seemingly endless supply suggests that individual objects have little value. Be what the philosopher Wendell Barry calls a "true materialist." Build things of quality, mend what you have and throw away as little as possible.
Live Simply: There is no substitute for sanity. These things are the skills you've learned out here, and they will serve you in good stead in any environment in the world. They are habits to live by. If anyone asks what your course was like, you can tell them. "We were organized, thorough and prepared. We took care of ourselves in basic ways. We entrusted people with our lives, learned to do without and persevered at difficult things. We learned to use new tools and took care of what we had with us. We lived simply." And if they are perceptive, they will say, "You don't need mountains to do that."