Portland, England Climbing |
I had never bouldered indoors before but have fallen in love with climbing in the last year and was eager to work on some different moves and strengthen a bit more for the rest of the week's outdoor climbing. We spent the entire day at this center and after an exhausting but extremely fun afternoon we were given the final five minute warning before we headed out. There had been one route that I had been challenged on and went back up one last time to try it again before we left; just like me to leave no stone unturned, I got back up on the wall to the same position that I had gotten to time and time again, falling numerous times before reaching for a hold just inches away. I finally decided to brace my fears, knowing there was a safety pad below, pushed myself those extra few inches, and missed the hand-hold. I fell to the crash pad two meters below my feet and landed on my left ankle, bearing all my weight into it I heard it snap and watched my body crumble. A scream emerged that I didn't recognize as my own and I had instantly known that I had broken my ankle. I'll save you the rest of the gory details as most readers don't want to have to relive that day with me but after a grueling half-an-hour of laying in agony on the mat, the ambulance finally showed up and drove me the three-hundred meters up the street to the hospital. My two best climbing friends came with me and helped me through it the entire time while, ironically, the center tried calling my emergency contact which I had put down as my own cell phone number knowing I didn't have a true emergency reliance to call while in England.
The paramedics let me gulp up the laughing gas until I had gone through their stash before I got processed and the results of the x-rays came to...I had broken my ankle in three places. And just like that, all of my plans changed.
I stayed in that hospital in Poole for twelve days. My climbing friends had to go back to their homes that weekend, I watched Easter come and go as I sat there waiting for surgery, I watched nurses come and go with their shifts and patients come and go. I watched my flight time pass as I was supposed to leave for my trip to Berlin then a few days later my train time leave to Prague. I watched my flights and buses leave for my adventures and my travel plans fly out the window. And though I met some incredibly blessed people who saved me so many times, I also faced the biggest struggles of loneliness and lack of communication in a poorly, free health care system in a foreign country where they hand me unknown drugs and sometimes barely spoke English or have enough staff to aid the sick or pained.

For those of you who didn't know, I lived at the top of the house in England, getting up 38 stairs in an old Victorian 'palace.' Even though my mom was there for a few days, things were very challenging. When my mom left a few days later, life got that much harder. And day by day, I saw myself leaving the house to see sunlight once a week, and leaving my bed once a day to eat and clean. I wanted to be the strong person to push through and finish school but the less I got up, the harder it became to try and care about school if traveling and everything had changed so drastically.
I eventually bucked up and decided it would be best for my healing if I took the time at my home to heal and get the doctors and help I needed.
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Family house BBQ after the accident |
Like I said, my experience was that like no others. I had adventure, friendship, and life-experience I wouldn't take back for anything. I just wish it didn't have to end so soon.
Nottingham Arboretum in the spring |
To anyone wishing to know more about my experiences in England, at Nottingham Trent University, HTH WorldWide Insurance, or anything else, please feel free to reach out to me by posting a comment and I will do my best to get back to you soon!
Thanks for reading!
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