Get Your Arm Bitten Off...
Posted by Jeremy Windsor on Nov 10, 2023
When it comes to safety in the mountains, no one writes better than Andy Kirkpatrick. As he launches a Kickstarter appeal for his new book "On The Line" here's what he has to say about buddying...
The buddy system has long been established in aerial and underwater sports, with each participant being fully responsible for both their own safety as well as the safety of their partners.
In an ideal world, such a system would not be necessary, as people would only take part in dangerous activities, where errors could be terminal, by holding a professional level of experience and competency, and qualifications. Such a person would be able to perform the activity flawlessly and without error one hundred percent of the time. They would be infallible.
But humans are fallible, and even in terms of skill and experience, often it’s both the novice and the pro who befall the stupid mistake, one for lack of knowledge, of knowing better, the other, from too much.
A lifetime of doing risky play can sometimes dull that early fear and paranoia, the stress of not wanting to make a stupid mistake in front of your peers, the worries that keep you safe, like a man on his first day working at the zoo, feeding the lion. I have a friend who – before doing something dangerous – imagines what people will say if he was to die doing it due to some stupid mistake. Such fear is what makes him tie that knot on the end of his abseil ropes, that makes him use a Prusik, that checks the avalanche risk before he sets off into the hills.
Fear is not necessarily something to get rid of in order to be better, as often it’s the last thing that keeps you alive. Yes, it might be a hindrance at times, but that depends on what your final destination ultimately is. People don’t run in crampons on exposed slopes because they fear they might trip. Eradicate that fear, like the fear of exposure, of falling, of dying, and sooner or later, you will.
Eventually, you begin to cut some corners, thinking you know where the line is, you feel comfortable with the risk, maybe even the death, the high risk somehow normalised, just part of the job description.
Then one day, you get your arm bitten off.
The buddy system, although missing from climbing and mountaineering, works so well because it’s a way to establish a statusless equilibrium of oversight, the novice checking the pro, the pro the novice, the foundation of the act being without judgement or ego. Two sets of eyes are better than one, especially when one set is half-open or looking the other way.
A dangerous activity that lacks a buddy system is an activity in which ego or apparent rank or status trumps safety, where stupid mistakes are not corrected before they become terminal, and where the inexperienced must learn fast how to feed the lions.
Maybe it’s time that we start slowly integrating a buddy system into climbing in a more meaningful way?
Thanks Andy!
Details of Andy’s books can be found here. I'd particularly recommend Cold Wars and Psychovertical - both winners of the prestigious Boardman Tasker Prize. Andy’s most recent writings can be found on Substack and are also highly recommended!
Details of the 2023/24 BMMS UCLan Mountain Medicine Winter Webinar Series can be found here. Places are FREE!
More information about the University of Central Lancashire's Diploma in Mountain Medicine (DiMM) can be found here.
Thanks for reading this post. If this is your thing why don't you take a look at other posts on the blog? Better still, why not join the British Mountain Medicine Society? More information can be found here.
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