Even though
it’s important to remark that Val Veny is
an amazing place, you have to distinguish between what the things are and what
you feel about the things you are looking at. A green field full of little
yellow flowers in the evening light is clearly different from the same green
field, but full of ants. In the first case, the beauty of the green field is
undeniable. However, as a matter of fact, you can say «I don’t like it» because
you don’t like, for example, yellow things or little flowers. But, obviously,
it’s your perception of the world
–and not the world itself– what leads
you to say «it’s awful» instead of «I don’t like it», I mean, to put your
sensations in place of reality (for more about these digressions, see C. S.
Lewis, The abolition of man, 1st
chapter).
You can’t
deny it’s easy to make this mistake. Actually, things we don’t like are usually
named bad things. You can call awful a beautiful, starry night if you
have a headache –the kind of headache that makes you see the world as a boring
place and the pharmacist as the worst kind of man because the perfect aspirin
hasn’t been discovered yet.
How often
have you made this mistake? How often have you seen some beautiful places,
amazing landscapes and pleasant people as bad
things?
Something
like that happened last August when I spent one night at Rifugio Elisabetta, a shelter near Courmayeur. I made this trip
with two friends, E and S. We attended the Holy Mass at Notre-Dame
de Guerison Sanctuary. At about 5.30 PM we drove car until the end of the Val Veny road. After that, we walked a
couple of hours through the valley, arriving at this place:
In the
picture, you can see the valley between the mountains, the fast-flowing stream
in the deepest zone and the road (only a few cars pass through it, those that
belong to the people who live there) on the left. If you walk along the road,
you suddenly start to walk between more and more streams that, together, seem like
a lake.
When it rains or when the snow melts, the little streams make up a real lake, like in this photo –taken two weeks after:
If you leave the road for an hour, you can visit the frozen lakes that are disappearing little by little… Actually, they are not completely frozen; you can find (in summer and if you are lucky) the edges frozen, but not the whole lake.
The road
becomes a path when the valley goes up towards the smallest mountain in this
area, Col de la Seigne (2516 metres high), the natural way between Courmayeur
(Vallée d’Aoste, Italy) and Bourg-Saint-Maurice (Savoie, France), a perfect
place to go trekking. The shelter I’ve just mentioned is on the
Italian side, and it’s a necessary step for trekkers.
Rifugio Elisabetta, the day after
I have to
confess that I’ve never made the way down to France; I’ve visited
Bourg-Saint-Maurice going down by the Petit
Saint Bernard pass, by car, as I will probably tell you some time.
E, S, and I arrived at Rifugio Elisabetta in the evening. We had
dinner (an excellent and not expensive two-dishes-plus-dessert Italian dinner) and
we went to sleep. We decided to visit Col
de la Seigne before daybreak, in order to see Mont Blanc shown by the first morning light. It meant we changed
the original plan, because we had planned to climb another mountain in (and not
before) the morning. I discovered I couldn’t make the two trips; and I didn’t
want to wake up at 5 AM… By the way, I thought (and I still think) the idea was
physically and geographically wrong, because from Col de la Seigne you can see the west side of Mont Blanc, and, you know, the morning sun lights up the east side
of everything in the world, not the west side, so we were going to look at the
shadow of Mont Blanc and to strain our
eyes with the first ray of sun in the daybreak. It seemed to me quite silly…
At 5 AM we
got up and left Refugio Elisabetta.
It was very cold, and obviously dark. I didn’t have a torch, while E and S did. I walked along the path following S’s light. It was fun. But when we were near the summit, we saw
them… An army of clouds came to us from France, and made the dark path a humid,
cold, and dangerous place. By the way, if we expected to see the Mont Blanc illuminated (if it was
physically possible), the French clouds made every confidence vain.
After that,
we started to go down. Going to Col
de la Seigneto see the break of dawn was a huge disappointment.
There was no sun, no view, no light, and no dawn at all. We felt
only the wet and cold air from the clouds and the violence of the wind in the
French-Italian Alps. Col de la Seigne’s
summit seemed to me an awful place, and climbing it seemed the worst
idea I’d ever agreed to. The rays of light from the sun were simply invisible.
I decided I’d never again go there, in the sunrise or at any other time
of the day.
To complete
our morning, while we descended, S
felt one of his legs was hurt. Mont
Fortin would have to wait for a
while. It would have been impossible to climb another summit that day.
But after a
few minutes, the army of clouds was broken
by the sunlight. It was an amazing –but very short– view. The whole landscape
showed clean of clouds and the break of dawn touched the summit of Mont Blanc. Against my opinion, the view
from Col de la Seigne(not from its
summit, still covered by clouds) was wonderful. I didn’t remember that
sunlight comes from theEast in the morning, but also from the South (in the
Northern Hemisphere, of course), then, there was a very strange view,
magnificent and subtle, sublime and quiet, simple and indescribable.
What’s the
true Col de la Seigne, the humid,
windy and cold summit or the amazing landscape and astonishing view of Mont Blanc from its Italian slope? Is it
a beautiful place or an awful one? I’ve thought several times about this
subject. I think our bad experiences have a good side too. To be honest,
I’d never imagined I’d have been in these mountains. Despite the horrible
weather, the most important fact is we climbed the Col de la Seigne. Even though there isn’t a line to show the
border between France and Italy, if you arrive at Col de la Seigne’s summit, you are on the border; I mean you
can go from a country to another on foot. If I had got enough time
(because, although it seems I was on holiday there, I was actually working
at Courmayeur and, for this reason, I had a kind of ‘timetable’,
where there was a moment to go out –and another one to go home!), I’d have
liked to descend to Bourg-Saint-Maurice. It might still be possible… I don’t
know when.
Col de la Seigne is a mountain, the lowest mountain of that
area and, then, the natural way to France. A mountain is itself amazing and
dangerous. The more you climb, the more you want to go up. The more you find
some slippery paths, the more you want to defy the hardest challenges. I think Col de la Seigne and, probably, every mountain in the world are wonderful
places in themselves; but our impressions of them are influenced by the
weather or some other incidental factor. Similarly, some ideas of our team mates can change a good
plan into a tragedy, and so we may think falsely that that mountain is
an awful place.
The same
situation appears again in our work, for example. How often do our work
mates change our impressions about our work? How often do we forget we have
–after all– a job instead of nothing?
Is it true that we sometimes lose the first purposes and goals that we aimed
at when we started to work? Make the same questions about other fields
of your life. What about family, neighbourhood, school, parish or any part of
our life in which we forget about the good things we have and we only pay
attention to the bad events?
By the way,
if I hadn’t followed up S’s idea, I
wouldn’t have seen the morning light shining on the eternal snow of Mont Blanc. If I hadn’t walked through
the dark clouds and the humid wind, I wouldn’t have taken the path to the warm
kiss of the sunrise in the valley. What are your dark clouds and where your
humid winds come from? Do you think of the sunrise waiting for you when
you reach the summit and you start to descend? What’s your sunrise? Probably, the last is the most difficult question;
not only because we tend to forget what we expect to reach when we start an
activity or when we –simply– live with other people, but also because we don’t
have a very clear idea of the things we are going to find, and when we find
them we can only discover that our ideas were a little (and a quite smudgy)
mirror of amazingly real (and unknown)
things that we have come to discover.
Everyone
who has gone through an experience like this, please, add a comment. And, if
you want, correct my English!-
(Thanks, Ana, for your help!)
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