Weekday Climbing
As a graduate student at UK, I typically was able to climb outside one weekday every week. It was easy to get up early and work, or stay up late working after getting home. Its amazing what you can get done when you are motivated to get out climbing. Now as a professor, that rarely happens. Then again, I guess I will have three months off this summer. Maybe I will get some climbing in then.
Pig: I work 2 very flexible jobs but I am very lucky. I will be rematriculating in the fall and I have been very fortunate to have several wise oracle-like people advise me on a health care career path that will be the best combination of career satisfaction and quality of life (time to climb). No job is worth a lifetime of limited or no climbing. Temporary interruptions, are of course, ok. It's funny, I grew up in the country dying to get to a big city; now I would be incredibly happy to live somewhere like Stanton or Beattyville that is cheap and near rock.
The theory of evolution is just as stupid as the theories of gravity and electromagnetism.
I certainly don't consider myself a weekday climber, but every once and a while I take one of the many vacation days I've amassed over the years. Of course I can only do that now that the kids are older (16&18), work is under control (which is basically a 50 hour week, 10 hour days from door to door) and the weather cooperates. It's taken years to get to the point where I can say, "hey, the weather looks good and I'm thinking of climbing on tuesday" and have both the employer and the spouse reply with a "go for it."
It's not always easy to get the stars to align, but when they do, I'm not sure there's much sweeter. Put's a smile on my face.
It's not always easy to get the stars to align, but when they do, I'm not sure there's much sweeter. Put's a smile on my face.
Pick myself up, stop lookin' back.
Grand Funk Railroad
Grand Funk Railroad
- jordancolburn
- Posts: 366
- Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2008 2:33 am
I'm with you on that, I grew up in far west KY and always wanted to go somewhere with stuff to do. Now i'm 2 hours away from good rock, when back home there were climbing areas in So Ill, west ky, and TN, all just 45min-1hour away from my house.Saxman wrote: It's funny, I grew up in the country dying to get to a big city; now I would be incredibly happy to live somewhere like Stanton or Beattyville that is cheap and near rock.