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<UID>
9401270739
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940727
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, July 27, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ALADAR NESSER/Special to the Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Devils Tower in Wyoming is a daunting sight for Mitch Albom,
from afar and up close. Albom's climbing outfit includes
special shoes, with sticky soles, a harness  that fits snugly
under his butt, ropes, clips and a hard hat.
Guide Andy Petefish, right, shows Albom the ropes during a rest
stop on Devils Tower. "Even car brakes fail once in a while,"
Andy warns.
ALADAR  NESSER/Special to the Free Press
When Albom finally gets a chance to catch his breath, he finds
the Wyoming landscape below even more breathtaking.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
MITCH'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURES
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CLIFF HANGER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
DEVILS TOWER, Wyo. --  It was not a good time -- with my fingers
trembling, my feet slipping, my heart pumping and my body pressed like
flypaper against the cold, hard rock -- to look down.

  I looked down anyhow.

  This is what I saw: trees. The tops of trees. And pigeons. The tops of
pigeons. It is never good to be above pigeons. Especially when this is the
first rock you have ever  climbed, and the air is thin and there's a skinny
rope going though your harness and nothing else keeping you from certain death
except a grip that could choke a statue -- but a grip I was losing. Where  was
my hold? Where was the damn crack to put my hands? Where, pray tell, were my
brains? I was 500 feet above earth, the wind was blowing, and as I began to
slip, my fingernails scratching down the surface,  I heard, from somewhere
deep inside me, the unmistakable  sound of a whimper.
  Mama! . . .
  All right. I'll catch you up. I had come to this magnificent structure,
Devils Tower, to address an ancient  yearning in my soul. Remember the movie
"Close Encounters,"  when Richard Dreyfuss couldn't get that mountain out of
his mind? This was the mountain. It haunted me, too. Of course, I didn't
expect to find aliens.
  Then again, I was in Wyoming.
  Which brings me to my guide, the man who would take me to new heights, the
man I knew only as Petefish -- Andy Petefish -- the legendary owner of Tower
Guides, who told me, over the phone, to come to the base, find his trailer by
the river and knock. This I did.
  Nobody answered.
  Mountains are not my normal line of work. Normally, I stick a pad  under
some basketball player's nose and ask a brilliant question about zone defense.
But ever since the big shots at this newspaper mistakenly approved an expense
account for a week's worth of adventure  travel, I knew I had to challenge the
Devil, America's first national monument. Reach the top. Conquer my fear. No
sooner had I finished my first escapade, surfing the Great Lakes, than I was
here, in  the badlands,  in the shadow of the beast.
  I knocked again. It was a ragged, old trailer, and not far away I saw a
pair of gravity boots on a pole. At least this Petefish guy knew how to hang
upside  down -- which, come to think of it, wasn't really encouraging.
  I wandered back to the park entrance. The Tower was huge. Foreboding.
Mostly it was steep. I mean, like straight up? Like a wall?  And  I'm
thinking, "This is crazy. Lemme out of here. I am not a human fly--"
  "Excuse me."
  I spun around. Here was a lean man, with chiseled cheekbones, piercing blue
eyes, tousled blond hair and  the easy stance of one used to heights and bored
with earth. He slid out his hand. The grip was powerful.
  "Andy Petefish, I presume?"
  He nodded.
  "We're not really going up that, are we?"  I pointed to the summit.
  He studied me. "Why not?"
  "Because I'm a chicken?"
  He stared blankly. So I guess humor hasn't found its way to Wyoming yet,
either.
Now, normally, you don't just  show up and climb Devils Tower. Once upon a
time, it was considered one of the hardest climbs in the business. The ancient
Indians, who prayed here, had a legend about this monolith: A long time ago,
seven young girls were being chased by giant bears, and just as the bears were
about to catch them, the girls jumped on a low rock and pleaded, "Take pity on
us, rock! Save us!" The rock began to grow,  pushing the girls higher, out of
danger, up to the sky, even as the bears slashed their claws into its side,
creating the famous columns that make the Tower  unique.
  Take pity on us, rock! Save us!
  It was a line I planned to use.
 
  WHAT YOU WEAR TO CLIMB A ROCK: Special shoes, with sticky soles, a harness
that fits snugly under your butt, ropes, clips and a hard hat.
  WHAT YOU LOOK LIKE:  One of the Village People.
 
  "See this knot?" Andy said, tying a monster through my harness hook on the
morning we attempted the climb. "Never, ever untie this."
  Gotcha.
  "And never unhook  from the rock until I yell down that you're on the rope."
  Gotcha.
  "Don't tense up. Tense muscles don't work well."
  Gotcha.
  "Any questions?"
  "Can I send a substitute?"
  He smirked.  It was 5 a.m. The sun was just yawning through the darkness.
Andy, who wanted to be first on the mountain -- "Avoid rush hour traffic," he
said, which I guess is funny, in Wyoming -- worked methodically,  sorting his
ropes, clips, slings, loops, holds and other devices to keep me from dying. I
honestly believe that Andy Petefish, had he been going alone, would have
needed a pair of Reeboks and a T-shirt  and he'd be at the top in 20 minutes.
Some men give you that kind of performance.
  And some don't. Like me. Andy -- who  likes his pupils to have a little
more training -- told me to get rid of my  watch, my ring, anything that
protrudes, and to empty my backpack of all but the essentials, like water and
courage. As he ran through the  checklist, I glanced at the Tower's
silhouette. It was awesome.  Scary.  It seemed to eat half the sky. I can't be
sure, but I thought I heard it say, "Your mama wears Army boots."
  "Ready?" Andy said.
  Up we go.
 
There's more than one way to scale a rock.  Naturally, I asked for the
elevator method. Andy, however, chose the Durrance Route, named for one of the
first men to tame the Tower. "It's an easier climb," he said.
  I mumbled silent thanks to  Mr. Durrance.
  Until I saw it. This was easy? It looked like the side of the Empire State
Building, without windows. You climb a rock like this in "pitches," where the
guide shimmies up, attaches the rope to pre-nailed hooks, then yells down to
the climber "On belay!" which means, basically, "Go home, you idiot!"
  No, actually, it means you're safe to try to  climb. I emphasize the word
"try."  The first pitch, about 80 feet, nearly killed me. You find yourself
flat against sheer stone, running your feet desperately up and down, searching
for a foothold, panting like a tired dog and clinging  to anything solid as if
it's your last hope. Remember slow dancing in high school? That's nothing
compared to how tight you hold a rock.
  "Stick your hand in a crack, turn your forearm and use the leverage to lift
yourself," Andy yelled.
  This makes about as much sense as  it sounds. By the time I reached the top
of the pitch, I was more bruised than a British rugby team.
  "Good job," Andy  said, sorting through his clips and hooks.
  "I . . . bunh . . . huhh . . . ah . . ." I said.
  Second pitch. Another 80 feet. Here I knew I was in trouble, because when
Andy went up, he disappeared  from sight, meaning the rock actually jutted
out, at a backward angle.
  "ON BELAY!" he yelled.
  "I'M A MORON!" I replied.
  Again, I found myself midway through with nothing to grab onto, and  no
place to go. Never have the words "get a grip" held more meaning.
  "I'm . . . in . . . trouble here!" I hollered.
  "Wedge inside a crack," Andy answered, "then push against your back, while
using your elbows and legs for leverage to lift."
  Did this guy write VCR manuals?
  I tried to do what he suggested, and nearly slipped altogether several
times. My adrenaline was pumping like  one of these self-serve gas hoses, and
my knees were doing things they were never meant to do. When I finally reached
the top of the pitch, throwing my hand over the tiny ledge, I was breathing so
hard,  I could have inflated a Goodyear blimp.
  "OK, you made it," Andy said. "Relax. Take a drink of water."
  Ha! I wasn't moving. My back was flat against the rock, my feet as far from
the ledge as  I could get. Andy hooked me in, and I was like a leashed dog
waiting outside the supermarket.
  Or in this case, above it.
  I suddenly realized that the sun was strong. We'd been climbing several
hours. "Look at that," Andy said.
  "Not if it's down," I said.
  "No, look."
  We were already high as a skyscraper, and the Tower cast a huge shadow over
the greens, browns and tans of the national park and the Belle Fourche River
below. It was breathtaking. At least it would have been breathtaking, if I had
any breath left.
  "This rope I'm attached to," I gasped, "it never breaks, does it?"
  "Nah," Andy said. He fiddled with his equipment. "But you know, you got to
be careful. Even car brakes fail once in a while."
  Up he went, smiling.
  What did he say?
 
I have noticed this about  adventure guides. Most of them have a calmness that
is so reassuring, you honestly believe if you were broken into a million
pieces, they could put you back together. Andy, who has guided hundreds of
people up the Tower during the last 12 years, had that kind of calm. He spoke
of the tranquillity of the mountain. How he never got tired of finding new
faces of the rock to climb, which he then got  to name. I suppose he'd name
mine "The Shut Your Eyes Route."
  Of course, Andy had another adventure guide's trait: horror stories.
  "You see that ledge," he said. "This guy they call Old Doc fell  once,
landed on that ledge, knocked his teeth out, bounced off and landed 40 feet
below. He's OK, though. He's got money."
  "Thanks," I said. "I feel much better now."
  And yet, I must admit, the  more pitches we made together, the more
confident I grew. True, I was running out of flesh to rip. And Andy yanked me
up a few inches when things got desperate. But eventually, I felt cocky enough
to  try a technique he suggested, straddling one of the Tower's cracks and
inching up, step at a time. I pushed off one hold -- and whoop!
  I was falling.
  "TAKE PITY ON ME, ROCK! SAVE ME!"
  Isn't  that what the girls said?
  I fell for only  a split-second. The belay rope caught me, I jerked and an
icy shiver went through my body. I grabbed a crack. Then promptly began to
sweat like a furnace.  "Ohmigod, ohmigod, ohmigod, ohmigod," I stuttered.
  "You OK?" Andy yelled down.
  It was then I noticed the pigeons, flying below me. We were in the sky,
above the birds' nests, lost in a tranquillity that would have been heavenly,
had I not just wet my pants.
  "I'm OK," I yelped. Inch at a time, I pushed, wedged, counter-forced and
grabbed my way up. When I reached the ledge, Andy was singing.
  "Cracklin' Rosie get on board. . . . "
  Oh, God. Anything but Neil Diamond.
  "How can you be singing?" I gasped. "I'm shaking here. I'm drenched. This is
like, the hardest thing I've ever tried  to do, I'm on a ledge that's as big
as a shoe box, and even the pigeons are laughing at me. What's the deal? I
mean, Neil Diamond?"
  Andy looked at me the way adventurers look at their pathetic pupils,  a
look that seems to say, "You are a flea. Die." Then he squinted in the hot
sun, and pointed to skinny bushes, about 30 feet up.
  "See that?" he said.
  "Yes?"
  "That's the top."
  I could  have kissed him. But he might have pushed me off.
 
And so it was. The top. I have never -- and I am including every paycheck I've
ever earned here -- been so happy to see anything. I actually dashed  the last
few feet, and the surface flattened into low grass and rock.
  "Where's the spaceship?" I said.
  Andy was singing again. 
  I wandered in a circle, felt a rush of accomplishment, and began to leap
like Rocky on the steps of the art museum.  At the center of the summit, 1,200
feet above the river, there is a marker, and a metal canister that contains a
register.
  "Go ahead," Andy  said, handing me the tube, "sign your name."
  I believe he actually smiled.
  I unrolled the paper, and noticed the cover, which had a sketch of the
Tower and an arrow that said: "You are here." Very funny. I flipped through
the pages, looking for a clean one, and I noticed one of the inscriptions.
  "They'll never find me here (signed) O.J. Simpson."
  I am not making this up.
  Never  mind. We had survived. We had scaled the Devil. I looked out over
the vast Wyoming prairie and counted my blessings. I also figured Andy -- who
wasn't even breathing hard --must be half mountain goat.  I took a deep
breath, and soaked in the history of this place, the ancient Indians, and
their charming legend of the seven girls on the rock. And then it hit me:
  How did they get down?
  Thursday:  A River Runs Through Him.
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