Terry was an extremely good guy; someone that I would call a true friend for all the right reasons. Terry and I were climbing/hiking buddies initially, as most of these things usually start out but progressed rapidly past the Rubicon of friendship and like Steve, we’d call each other just to shoot the sh*t.
As a few here have already stated in as many words, Terry was troubled. For those who aren’t in the know, Terry has had a very difficult life of which depression was only one of those demons. Without going into too many specifics, Terry’s life before Rob Jensen died was already hell. As most of us know, Terry posted here to the forums regularly, almost to the point where it was funny. Fact, he posted so much, I’m surprised he never replied to his own posts! But he did this because the people here on this site, the folks he crossed paths with were, quite literally, his family.
Fact of life, people don’t handle death in the same manner. We all have our own coping mechanisms; some are better at it than others and thus, judgment in this has no place. When Rob Jensen died on Snowmass, it hit Terry hard…very hard. Terry’s coping skills in regards to having a close friend die I believe weren’t as developed as some. When you play this game
(to borrow from Joe Simpson), death is something you absolutely, irrefutably and involuntarily must accept. Texts I’ve exchanged with Terry over the last couple weeks, mostly in regards to Steve, assure me of that. One simply cannot objectify ones’ own pain and grief at another’s passing, even if they didn’t know the person half as well than another. Every person’s heart beats emotionally different.
Terry, again as we’ve noticed, has been absent from the site for a while, mostly stemming over the fall out over Rob’s death (which I won’t go into). Trying to deal with his own personal demons, not all of which were of his making, Terry stumbled and succumbed further and further into depression. Being with and talking him through most of this the last couple years or so, I’ve seen the rollercoaster of apathy, sadness, glee and contentment he’s gone through.
And then Steve happened.
Terry and I would talk frequently of Steve, his climbing ethic and how Terry could use and integrate that into his own being, which, I believe he did. Steve and I had some lengthy conversations about Terry. The course he was on, how to correct it and how to help without being an enabler (a tricky and ethically hard thing to do). And as I’ve recently found out (on Saturday), Steve would likewise talk with Nona & Terry about myself. I can’t think of a single more damaging condition then depression…we all suffered from it. I’m fortunate in that, I’ve finally found someone reliable, confident and strong enough to stand by my side and help me when I need it.
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I’ve been so f***ing pissed off, empty, irritable, ungodly depressed and directionless lately, I have no idea who to be pissed off at, what to do or where to go
(Just yesterday, at Trinity Brewing in Colorado Springs, the waiter brought out sateen buffalo wings to Sarah and I. I looked at it and literally said, “What the fu*k are these?” and not kindly.) But if there’s one thing I won’t do…is blame Terry. What he did, under the weight he was suffering from, I completely understand. Suicide really does seem more reasonable, logical and less stigmatizing than having to deal with the pain (again, there’s a lot more to this I’m not at liberty to say).
Terry’s love of the 14ers, the mountains and helping others was intrinsic. Knowing Steve only helped to elevate that love to spiritual and philosophic levels. We (collectively) were Terry’s family. Trust me on this. And as a brother, I WILL be crying for this lost soul for years to come knowing now, that Steve was 100% right when, only a few months ago when I was at bottom, he told me
“Kiefer, in my experience, climbers are an eclectic bunch. We don’t do well with relationships. A lot of us are lone wolves; a lot of us have problems. We’re really messed up! (He laughed
) But this is why we go climbing. So we can be at peace.” –paraphrased
It was a pleasure meeting you Louis (father) and Tom (older brother). Terry’s organs and tissue will be, as Britt stated, be donated and help or save close to 70 people. Seeing Terry in the ICU, answering the barrage of donor questions alongside Jerry (jam6880) and Britt, I would implore you, if you haven’t already, become an organ donor. And put aside your differences with others, apologize and if need be, take the high road for past transgressions. Hatred, apathy and criticism are cancers that only serve to alienate. Because ‘this web we weave’ connects all of us in ways we’ll never understand until something like this happens
…then it’s too late.
RIP Terry.
*There will be a memorial. It's in the works of having the details hashed out. And props to Louis for taking in Terry's cats.
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Summit of La Plata
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SW Ridge of Little Bear