Such was the case too for Lygon Stevens, a mountain climber who died in January in an avalanche on Little Bear Peak in southern Colorado. Stevens wrote 15 journals during her life, and her parents have taken text from her writings to publish a book, "Cairns for the Climb".
The Coloradoan ran an article on Dec. 7 about Stevens' story that included some of what was in her journals:
The book includes climbs in Colorado, Alaska's Denali (Mount McKinley) and Ecuador, as well as her last entry, next to a blurred photo of her climbing the west ridge of Little Bear Peak, the last image of Lygon, taken hours before she died.
'She really felt that God spoke to her when she put pen to paper,' her father said.
Though Nick (Lygon's father) had encouraged Lygon to keep a journal from the time she was 10 years old, he was surprised by the amount of writing his daughter left behind.
Her parents saw about 10 percent of her writing before they started unearthing the journals.
Some of the writing is what you would expect from a teenager and young woman, including insecurities about school and appearance, Nick said.
But they found nothing guile or sneaky.
Many of her poems and essays document Lygon's growing faith and understanding of God, much of it in the context of her mountain-climbing adventures.
'I climb because I love the mountains ... and I meet God there,' one undated journal entry reads.
"Cairns for the Climb" is available at www.heightsoffaith.org and at Probasco's Christian Bookstore, 344 N. Lincoln Ave. in Loveland, Colo.
Hi Brant - This is very interesting. I met Lygon a couple of times growing up. Her parents are very good friends with my aunt and uncle in Helena. What a wonderful thing for them to be able to share.
ReplyDeleteCallie,
ReplyDeleteWow! Lygon sounded like a really cool person. That's neat that you met her.
Brant