Mount Everest
A few years ago, 33 year old Erik Weihenmayer dreamed of climbing Mount Everest, a feat that defies many of the world’s most expert climbers. In fact, nearly 90% of those who attempt the climb never reach the summit. Temperatures sink lower than 30 degrees below zero. Besides extreme cold, 100 mile per hour winds, deadly crevasses, and avalanches, the climber must overcome the challenges of high altitude, lack of oxygen, and perhaps unsanitary food and water.
Since 1953, at least 165 climbers have died in the attempt to scale the 29,000 foot high summit.
In spite of the risks, hundreds line up each year to make the ascent, Erik among them. But there is one important difference between Erik and every other climber who has attempted to ascend before, Erik is totally blind.
When Erik was 13 years of age, he lost his sight as a result of a hereditary disease of the retina. Although he could no longer do many of the things he wanted to, he was determined not to waste his life feeling depressed and useless. He began to stretch his limits.
At age 16 he discovered rock climbing. By feeling the face of the rock, he found handholds and footholds that allowed him to climb. Sixteen years later, he began his ascent up Mount Everest. The story of his climb, as you might imagine, was filled with many harrowing and life threatening challenges. But Erik eventually scaled the south summit and took his place with those who had gone before him, one of the few to stand on top of the highest mountain on the face of the earth.
When asked how he did it, Erik said, “I just kept thinking….Keep your mind focused. Don’t let all that doubt and fear and frustration get in the way.” Then, most importantly, he said, “Just take each day step by step.”
Erik conquered Everest by simply putting one foot in front of the other, and continued to do so till he reached the top.
Like Erik, we may have obstacles that would hold us back. We may even make excuses why we can’t do what we want to do. Perhaps when we are tempted to justify our own lack of achievement, we could remember Erik, who, in spite of having lost his sight, accomplished what many thought was impossible – simply by continuing to put one foot in front of the other.
An old proverb states that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Sometimes we make the process harder than we need to. We will never make a journey of a thousand mile by fretting about how long it will take or how hard it will be. We make the journey by taking each day step by step and then repeating it again and again until we reach our destination.