September/October 2006
editorial
Close to death
By RAVI DYKEMA
How can we each find happiness? One way we pursue this question here
at Nexus is by talking with people who have traveled to extraordinary
places and have come back enriched, and, at least eventually, happier.
A few months ago I sat with a man who never chose to undergo such a journey.
He simply dropped from the sky into an extraordinary place when he was
23 years old. He lived for over two months in a fiercely hostile land
that was full of death. His story about his subsequent trek out of there,
and eventually to happiness, astounded me.
The man is Nando Parrado. In October of 1972 the airplane he was riding
in hit a mountain and broke in two. The front half fell like a missile
onto a vast glacier and rocketed down it at hundreds of miles per hour.
But the glacier's oozing downhill creep had produced a ripple in its smooth
back, a ridge of snow, into which the missile rammed, crushing many who
were inside. Nando almost died. His skull broke into four pieces. He awoke
from a coma four days later in a stinking cramped fuselage surrounded
by a freezing white world, and death. His mother was dead and his sister
was near death, and she soon died in his arms. His best friend was dead.
He and his companions knew nothing about mountains, snow, alpine climbing
or living at sub-zero temperatures. They thought they would be rescued,
but soon learned that they were irretrievably lost.
Sixty-eight days later, after nearly dying again under an avalanche,
after seeing many more friends die, after eating the bodies of the dead
to survive, after walking into near-certain death for 10 days by climbing
an ice-covered 14,000 foot high mountain and down the other side into
a hopeless wilderness of endless peaks, Nando spotted a peasant on horseback.
Nando told me, I was so close to death, I felt it brush me so many times...
But I discovered that love is as strong as death. What I thought about
up there was love. So love gave us the strength to keep on living and
surviving the extreme cold at night. Every single one of us was thinking
about going back to our families, to their affection. That is engraved
in our backs with ice. The cold that we always say burns like acid really
left a mark of love in us. Love is the strongest, the most powerful thing
that exists in this world.
The Andes, he said, took from him so much, but it also gave him this
insight about love which he says has illuminated his life. He also said
he learned that, you cannot be sure what's going to happen tomorrow. Nobody
knows. So I enjoy everything. I enjoy being with my friends. I enjoy drinking
water. I enjoy going to the movies. I enjoy being here, in your office.
I wouldn't have come if I had thought I wouldn't enjoy doing this interview.
No, really. I don't need the money [from books sales] or anything like
that. And that's what I do. I enjoy my life.
Nando Parrado, now 56, lives with his wife of 27 years and two daughters
in Montevideo, Uruguay, in the same neighborhood as nine of the other
15 Andes crash survivors. He is a former professional race car driver,
is a prominent TV producer and business owner, and is a motivational speaker
who travels the world.
Please see my interview with Nando
Parrado.