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Outside Magazine, June 2008
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Dispatches: Book Reviews
Adventure Tripping
What is it with extreme athletes and paranormal experiences?

By Jason Daley

Explorers of the Infinite
Explorers of the Infinite

IF YOU THINK REINHOLD Messner's yeti sightings were nutty, wait till you hear the tales Maria Coffey turns up in her new book, Explorers of the Infinite (Tarcher/Penguin, $27). The veteran adventurer and author of 2003's Where the Mountain Casts Its Shadow had a couple of extrasensory experiences after her boyfriend died on Everest and she nearly drowned in Morocco, which got her wondering: Why do certain athletes—climbers, snowboarders, singlehanded sailors, and other hard-driving types—seem to have more spiritual and supernatural epiphanies than your regular Joe 10K? Thin air, mental exhaustion, and dehydration might be part of it. But Coffey posits a more curious theory: that athletes' ability to push "beyond human consciousness into another realm" helps them break physical boundaries, and vice versa. Here are a few of the mind-boggling tales in her case files:

In 1985, after Mexican climber Carlos Carsolio attempted Nanga Parbat's Rupal Face with a Polish team, tapes of their dicey descent revealed that Carsolio had spoken in Spanish while the other climbers spoke Polish. " 'But when we were up there we had understood each other perfectly,' " Carsolio said.

While climbing in the Dolomites, British mountaineer Adrian Burgess says, he once watched a basketball-size rock crash directly toward his brother Alan's head—then stop in midair before floating to the right and landing gently on Alan's daypack.

In 1992, a few weeks after Polish climber Wanda Rutkiewicz died in the Himalayas, her mother got a late-night phone call. "She heard her daughter's voice," Coffey writes. "'I am very cold,' the voice said. 'But don't cry, everything will be fine. I cannot come back now.' Then the line went dead."




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Madison, Wisconsin-based freelance writer JASON DALEY is a frequent contributor to Outside.

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