Everest selfies for the gram! Long lines and piles of trash at the world’s apex



We need a complete and total stop to summiting Everest until we can figure out what’s going on.

So someone might be tempted to say after taking one look at the viral video of the long, slow line of hikers taking their turns at the top.

More and more people, stepping over the frozen corpses of those who came before them, spend more and more money to feed the internet more and more images of themselves doing something that once no one did and that now lacks enough room to accommodate all comers.

“It’s crazy we’ve turned Everest into a DMV line at altitude for really rich people,” sighed one poster on X. “Imagine getting on top of Everest and next person in line nudges you in two minutes yelling, my turn babes,” joked another.

Of course, you don’t have to be rich to climb Everest or any mountain. But the self-defeating spectacle of today’s spiritual lemmings ascending the famed peak, only to hit the dab for the gram and descend, underscores how much our wealth today is being channeled into vain, hollow, formulaic, and increasingly automated behavior.

It’s a sharp reminder that, for all the ways technology shapes our behavior independent of our hopes, beliefs, study, and schemes, it also serves our passions and plans the way the fabled monkey’s paw grants wishes good and hard.

The irony is painful. We fallen humans constantly look for ways to surrender the freedom we seem to so jealously defend — when, in reality, the stronger motivator is that we get jealous of people who seem to have more freedom than we do because we hate it whenever anyone seems to have more of anything than we do.

As a result, we simultaneously lust after ways to automate our choice-making and thirst to feel special compared to all the others who are increasingly similar to us.

NAMGYAL SHERPA/Getty

So we build tech that can help that process along, but when it does, we become super resistant to recognizing how much of our own control we’ve given it, just as we allocate our money toward the same demented ends.

Now, on Mt. Everest, both those forces are converging in spectacularly absurd and depressing style. More and more people, stepping over the frozen corpses of those who came before them, spend more and more money to feed the internet more and more images of themselves doing something that once no one did and that now lacks enough room to accommodate all comers.

Pop music is no longer the “early warning system” Marshall McLuhan once recognized in society’s artists, but at least one band saw this coming — the edgy, catchy, and always topical Everything Everything. Recent single “The Mad Stone,” off the band's new album "Mountainhead," decries our relentless foolishness through a metaphor come obscenely to life on Everest:

“Are you coming outside? I can make it a business, I can sell you it,” the lyrics begin. “At the peak of Choice Mountain, you've been saving up.”

At the very top, there was a screen that showed a picture of a man
Who stood there looking at a picture of a man who stood there
Looking at a picture of a picture of a man on a screen
And he was looking at another picture of a man who stood there
Looking at a picture of a man who stood there looking at a
Picture of a picture of a man who was the double of me …
The Mad Stone is singing
Can you say the same?
You get no pleasure from your pleasure center
In your reptile brain

At a time when so many of us just can’t wait to lay all the blame for our towering ills at the feet of this or that — oligarchy, technology, anything but our own selves — it’s hard to break out of the infinite regress of mirrored images and experiences described by Everything Everything. But is it really any more difficult than that climb back down from the DMV at the top of choice mountain?

Soldier who lost his legs in Afghanistan climbs Everest: 'Just had to carry on'



Gurkha veteran Hari Budha Magar lost both his legs in Afghanistan while serving with the British Army. Though maimed, Magar was never defeated. On Friday, the 43-year-old successfully soldiered up the world's tallest mountain.

Two double amputees have previously climbed to the top of Mount Everest in the Mahalangur Himal sub-range of the Himalayas: Mark Inglis of New Zealand in 2006 and Xia Boyu of China in 2018. Magar is, however, the first person with above-the-knee amputations to have successfully summited the peak.

The Guardian reported that Magar, a father of three, left his native Nepal to serve as a corporal in the Gurkha regiment in the British Army. The Gurkha soldiers, whose motto is "Better to die than be a coward," are known for carrying their 18-inch kukri knife into battle even to this day.

After losing his legs to an improvised explosive device in 2010, Magar had figured his life was "completely finished."

"I grew up in Nepal, up to age of 19, and I saw how the disabled people were treated in those remote village," said Magar. "Many people still think that disability is a sin of previous life and you are the burden of the earth. I believed this myself because that is what I saw. That is how I grew up."

The veteran, who now lives in Canterbury, England, battled alcoholism and depression after the explosion. Nevertheless, Magar persevered.

The veteran, whose motto has been "no legs, no limits," eventually helped strike down a ban on both double amputees and blind people climbing Everest, thereby ensuring he would have a chance at simultaneously surmounting nature and his injuries.

The BBC reported that Magar, hoping to "inspire others" and "change perceptions on disability," set off on May 6 with a team of Nepalese climbers, lead by Krish Thapa, a fellow Gurkha veteran and British special forces mountain troop leader.

According to Magar's Twitter account, he "stood victorious" atop Everest around 3 p.m. on May 19, noting, "Disability is no barrier to reaching the 8,849 metre peak."

Magar told his team down below via satellite phone, "That was tough. Harder than I could have ever imagined."

"We just had to carry on and push for the top, no matter how much it hurt or how long it take," said Magar. "If I can climb to the top of the world, then anyone, regardless of their disability, can achieve their dream. No matter how big your dreams, no matter how challenging your disability, with the right mindset anything is possible."

The former soldier indicated that when things got particularly tough climbing the mountain, where temperatures can plunge to -117.4°F and winds can gust around 175 mph, he thought about his family and everyone who helped him get onto the mountain.

"As long as you can adapt your life according to the time and the situation, we can do anything we want," stressed Magar.

Since returning safely to base camp, Magar has redirected his energies to raising money for five veterans' charities. The climber is expected back in Kathmandu on Monday.

\u201cOn May 19th 2023, @hari_budha_magar and his team made history by becoming the first double above-knee amputee to reach the top of Mount Everest. Despite losing his legs in Afghanistan 13 years ago, he proves that disability is no barrier. #Everest70 #HariBudhaMagar #Inspiration\u201d
— Everest 70 (@Everest 70) 1684616604

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