By Mira Brody EBS CONTRIBUTOR
BOZEMAN –
Inside the warehouse walls pocked with colorful climbing holds, sit
intimidating steel structures and giant weight racks used to hone the body to
better move up and over mountains, locals gather to listen to stories of
adventure: stories
of fear, death, pain, failure and triumph.
For
millennia—before we could even write—humans have gathered to bask in the art of
storytelling. In Bozeman it happens once a month at The Mountain Project, a
mountain athlete training gym located a stone’s throw from the city’s historic
Story Mill district.
“I’m going to
read you a story,” begins local author Al Kesselheim, the first of three
speakers who opens a book in front of an audience of about 50, a spectrum of
puffy jackets. “And we can pretend we’re all sitting together around a fire.”
Mountain
Yarns, a community storytelling series organized by Mountain Project coach
Colleen Shields and owner and head coach Mike Wolfe, began last year in an
effort to gather the community during some of the longer, colder evenings of
the year. There’s no campfire but there is beer and good company. On the first
Thursday of every month from November through March, three speakers will
present their tale of adventure—this month’s theme: partners.
“We created Mountain Yarns as a way to bring our
community together, in person, through live storytelling,” Shields says. “So
many stories and experiences these days are shared over social media and the
majority of the time we only see the highlights. Our hope was to create an
evening where the community could come together to connect, share and
interact.”
Kesselheim
opened with an intense passage of survival from his book “Threading the
Currents: A Paddler’s Passion for Water.” Matt Madsen spoke of his human-powered ascent of
Denali with his partner via bike, foot, ski and raft. Whit Magro shared a journey of friendship and loss
following a five-year venture resulting in a new 2,000-foot free route dubbed
“Gambling in the Winds,” on Wyoming’s Mount Hooker. This last project started
with Hayden Kennedy, a talented climber who passed away in October of 2017.
“As soon as
that death happened, there was this immediate need to put this thing back
together as a sort of a way to grieve and move forward,” says Magro,
backdropped by a projected photo of the crew scattering a Ziploc bag of
Kennedy’s ashes.
Outside a
train rumbles by, its horn piercing the quiet room for a moment. We’re close
enough to hear the rhythmic clamor of the tracks. “Bad things happen,” Magro
adds. “You lose friends, but that doesn’t mean you have to give up.”
The
relationship of storytelling and mountain pursuits is a theme that resonates
during Mountain Yarns. It’s a form of therapy we feel drawn to, perhaps more
than others, in these oft-secluded ski towns.
“Mountain
communities suffer a lot from mental health issues and isolation,” Madsen says.
“I used to work in Summit County, Colorado, for the Family Resource Center and
we’d actually work on a lot of storytelling stuff because it’s a great way to
bring people together.”
Storytelling
is also a source of inspiration, says Nick Traux of Uphill Pursuits, a new
mountaineering shop in Bozeman. “We want to be able to share the every-person’s
experience,” says Traux, who began hosting his own storytelling series at
Uphill as well. The first is on Jan. 23.
“Not
everyone’s a Conrad,” he said, as Conrad Anker himself held a hand up in
farewell and exited the store. “Not everyone’s the sponsored athlete. A lot of
people are doing those things on a similar level but those stories don’t get
press. It’s a means to share that thread.”
The Mountain Project encourages everyone who has a
meaningful story related to researching or exploring the outdoors. Each month
the team invites a different local nonprofit to which attendees can donate, and
in practice with Montana hospitality there is always plenty of beer to go
around, donated by a local brewery.
“It’s a
strong source of inspiration for people,” says Kesselheim just before his
presentation, hand wrapped around a worn copy of his novel. “It’s important to
pass on ideas and traditions and emotions. Storytelling is critical.”