(July 25, 2015) One in seven humans claim Chinese nationality. That’s a lot of folks. Most of them seem to prefer to congregate in an eastern population belt. Which we had been making our way through. Some byproducts. Crowds. Think weekend Disneyland wherever you went. Skyscrapers. From the big city to the humblest town people living upward. And pollution. Uniformly green sky without gap. At Xian we made plans of evasion. Two hours away lay the Taoist sacred mountains of Hua Shan. A temporary respite from all three.
Sometimes plans unravel early. The road to Hua Shan was lined with skyscrapers. On arrival the dense smog strangled the mountains into hills. And the crowds launched, to my efforts, a concerted campaign of irritating obstruction. I purchased the first of 14 tickets. Clean air was expensive. My mood blackened. Tickets 7 8 9 and 10 were for the cable car up and down the mountain. This reflected a compromise from earlier familial negotiations concerning our mountain hike. Fumiko having a healthy and reasonable fear of such expeditions based on earlier experiences. There would be no foot climb. The line for the cable car was devastating. There were lines to get into the lines. My teeth made contact and began to reduce themselves.
The stewing needed to end. As the line tried inching forward Fumiko took my hand. “It’s going to be OK. We’re going to have fun.” Misery is often a decision. A fork in the road chosen. I was with the most important person in my world. Was that not more than enough? Outlook reduced to an insight. I backtracked to the fork and hustled down it’s other branch. That simple.
The cable car held eight people. It’s ascent up vertical white granite for thousands of feet brought to mind reverse BASE jumping. Fear and thrill danced. I buried my fear as solid fathers must. We crested. But we weren’t at the end. The cable car went over the summit just like a car going over a hoop de do on a country road. Weightlessness. Only here there was no landing. The cable car matched its ascent with an equal plunge. The earth yawned. Solid became liquid. I yelped. A young Chinese mother grabbed me. No time to consider her after life companion. Fumiko went wild. Sometimes a line earns you something.
Eventually the cable car gave up trying to reach the true summit. Instead it entered a tunnel and deposited us. We emerged into unshrouded sunshine for the first time since arriving in China. The crowd still milled but we were willing to take two out of three. And what crowds! Ages, shapes, outfits. Nothing was unrepresented from spiked heels to centarians. United by two observations. One they were Chinese. As in 99% Chinese. This had been universal since arriving in China. The identifiable tourist had always been less than 1% non Chinese. The other 99% of people wandering around behaving in an identifiably touristic manner were locals. There is money here now and the Chinese are using it to see the homeland. Two, was the obvious enthusiasm. These folks were escaping the same three. They had bought the same tickets. Smiled patiently through the same lines. Now it was time to party hike. We jumped in the graceful current.
For centuries religious recluses lived in and on these peaks. Searching for their needed answers. Left alone, guarded by inaccessibility. No more. Now the five Granite peaks are linked by a circular path hacked from stone or imposed by concrete. At one point an optional 2 foot wide plank walk allows for a 2000 foot fall should error visit. Which it does. This is the part of the trail where the “timid would feel rather horrified” according to the sign. The rest of the trail tracks granite free falls whenever possible. Precipices protected by a single chain linking metal posts. Endearingly tens of thousands of padlocks have been clipped onto the links. Their keys launched. Forever locking in love or a dream.
Leaning against these chains, looking down at clouds, recalls something primordial. An illogical urge to launch. Not to die. Just to know. I remember a story of a man who nightly dreamed strongly of flying. On Half Dome in Yosemite he stood on the edge. The dream returned. He turned to his friend said something to the effect of “I think I can do it.” Climbers remember a woosh. Looking down they saw a plummeting man flapping wildly. At the time the story seemed ridiculous. But pushing against the chain made me not so sure. And I blinked and pulled back. What the hell, I don’t even like heights.
The current carried us to all five peaks. The crowds receded in focus and the mountains took center stage. As a Chinese wood block artist would have painted them had he never seen them. A storm stumbled into one peak and then threw in some thunder for drama. We hid in a temple under the watchful eyes of Gods. The storm moved on. Fumiko tested her limits on wet boulders, her trusty Chuck Taylor hightops never faltering. The day dimmed. It was time to leave the mountains alone to their dreams. And we did.