I was recently moping that my fella doesn’t like the same
kind of adventures that I do. A lot of couples function as each other’s primary
backcountry partner, to varying degrees. The most extreme version of the
outdoor couple speaks only in plural pronouns and is always posting summit
selfies, arm in arm.
With more reflection I realized that I’ve never dated an
adventure partner. My college boyfriend was the one I rode bikes with the most,
but he was really into “training” and I openly mocked him for it. Before I
moved west I dated a guy who was pretty good for a long trail ride, but he was
so cold to me and so disaffected that the fun part, the bullshitting in parking
lots and at intersections, was missing.
I could never date a boy that doesn’t do things, but I also
don’t need a significant other for a backcountry experience. I’m kind of a hack
but I’m self-sufficient enough to fix a flat, solve a problem, navigate, and
keep myself warm and fed, without leaning on a person that is committed to
supporting me because of some sort of relationship contract.
Tyler rides and he taught me how to ski and tour, but we
have different priorities when we go outside and the breach seems to be
widening. Thus the necessity of the “let’s do something” friend, or LDS friend,
with apologies to Joseph Smith.
My father was my first LDS friend; he taught me how to ride,
I taught him how to run, he taught me the importance of bringing a beer for
after a run, and almost every Saturday at work, we’d have the conversation: “Do
something this afternoon?” “Sure.”
I think that’s what makes a great LDS friend: say yes first,
plan later. Spread a map out on the table and trace a potential route. Know
that trying and failing is better than not getting out at all.
I had a lot of mountain bike adventure buddies, maybe
because Pisgah breeds people who want to go lasso as much territory as possible
into a brutal loop, and then drink novelty-sized Dos Equis afterwards. But running is more intimate and there’s less gratification,
if you live for adrenaline.
I was overjoyed to find another LDS friend in Tahoe. Rebecca
Duffy and I rode the whole South Lake trail system, her on an old beater Gary
Fisher, not as confident on descents but just
so down. We chased ideas across Desolation Wilderness. “We should create a
Fallen Leaf Rim Trail, we should connect these peaks, OK I’ll steal some chips
from the kitchen if you get a wilderness permit.”
The cliché is the boyfriend ditching his chick to get after
it with his bros, but what if there’s a minor gender shift? I have a new LDS
friend now but going off in the woods alone with a dude can be an awkward
platonic proposition. Tyler totally gets it—he knows that since he’s unwilling
to do the nonsense I want to do, he can’t be possessive and he can’t stop me
from playing outside or I get all sad and bitchy and hard to be around.
Fortunately my roommate is also someone who is always down, even at dawn. Pic courtesy of Cy |
Yeah, I wish I had a great LDS lady right now, but I haven’t
found one yet, someone who has a wide-open schedule and goes the same speed as
I do and doesn’t already have a boyfriend who fulfills all her outdoor needs.
Maybe I’m just not the kind of person who gets that from a relationship. It makes me sad, but maybe it also sets me free.
Shout out to the furry four footed beasties who are always up for "let's do shit".
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