I am not and have never been anything even approximating an athlete. I happen to be blessed, however, with athletic friends who are determined to keep me healthy, even if it kills me.
As already mentioned here, my Fit Friend made me get back on my bicycle and ride a ridiculous number of miles over the past 2 years. There's also Winter Sports Friend - I met her during the girls' homeschool skating sessions. Turns out she is really into skiing. Her children learn to ski when they are just 4 years old.
My kids? Don't learn much of
anything at that age, actually.
So! Because her two youngest girls and my two youngest have hit it off during ice skating, Winter Sports Friend decided it would be a great idea for us to take all 4 of them skiing at a nearby resort, on one of the half-price days. In a fit of insanity, I not only agreed to this plan but also announced that I, too, would take a beginner ski lesson.
Because skiing is a good sport for people who are scared of heights, right?
Today was the big day - we all piled in Winter Sports Friend's car and headed for the mountains. Her skiing-adept kids jabbered excitedly, while I wondered for over an hour if there were a graceful way to avoid humiliating myself in front of my children. I couldn't think of one, however, and soon found myself being outfitted (with Winter Sports Friend's guidance) for skis, helmets, boots, poles.
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At no point during the day did I look like either of these people. |
By the way, walking in ski boots? Is really, really hard. I was exhausted by the time I staggered over to where the lesson would be held. I got through the first part of the lesson without embarrassing Rachel and Susie by falling over, and then the instructor said, "Okay, now, let's go over here to the chair lift!"
By the way, have I ever mentioned that I cannot get Susie on an escalator? Do you know how many stinky-smelling service elevators and creepy out-of-the-way stairwells I have had to endure due to Susie's aversion to moving stairs that go up in the air?
So!
Chair lift. At these words, Susie stopped dead in her tracks. "He's just going to show us how it works," I reassured her (and myself). "There's a Magic Carpet conveyor belt thing-y over there that we are going to use. I looked it up.
Don't worry." She shrugged and we stepped/glided to where our teacher was already giving directions on how to use a ski lift.
"Okay, you stand between those gates, and right after a chair passes you, you move forward, so the next chair comes up behind you."
Fat chance of that working out, I thought, picturing my uncoordinated self face down in the snow after being hit in the back by a motorized bench.
"To get off, you flip up the bar and wait until you reach the flat part - then you simply step off the chair and glide. Get out of the way quickly!" he said to the bunch of us, newbie skiers who still couldn't glide properly, let alone with
any amount of speed.
"Okay," the instructor pointed to me and Susie and another young victim. "You three get in the gates and take the next chair. We three will follow in the next one."
Um...
"Come on!" he said, motioning toward our doom. "Let's go!" To my surprise, I saw Susie start to move forward, leaving me no choice but to follow. I glanced up at the extremely open-air chairs dangling high above the ground.
Insane.
"Okay, get ready! Move forward! Forward!" our crazed dictator of a teacher commanded, as I prepared to be heinously injured by a contraption that was looking more and more rickety by the second. "Sit! Sit!" he yelled. "Pull the bar down!"
And the three of us were
up. Just like that.
"Well!" I said to Susie, as brightly as I could muster, considering that we were obviously creaking toward our deaths, miles above the ground. "Aren't you a brave girl! Wait until Daddy hears!"
Chalk one up to facing your fears and conquering them, right?
"I am NEVER doing this again," Susie said quietly, staring straight ahead. "NEVER."
Can't say I blame her...