Neuroscientist Christopher Lowry at the University of Colorado Boulder, along with Lisa Brenner, the director of the Veterans Affairs Rocky Mountain Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center in Denver, are conducting research using Mycobacterium vaccae with veterans suffering from PTSD and mild traumatic brain injury. Today, national nonprofit programs such as Warriors That Farm, Veteran Farmer Coalition, and Veterans to Farmers help vets heal through farming, gardening, and beekeeping. Earl was onto something, but the science was still a mystery at the time.
Besides growing much of his own food, Earl earned a great deal of his income from peddling goods at flea markets, a livelihood that paralleled his beliefs in recycling and reusing. In his youth, he paid for his clothes with money made from trapping furs, often with his friend Walter, and selling his handiwork. The freedom he found walking off the war from Georgia to Maine became such a need that he devised ways to support himself and weave that freedom into his everyday life.
Earl and I had a lot in common. After I completed my thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail in 1979, we wrote long, handwritten letters to each other. Hiking the trail had coaxed the writer out of me, and as it had been for Earl, the trail was a great source of inspiration. I shared the manuscript of my first book, A Woman’s Journey on the Appalachian Trail, with him, and he offered generous feedback. Handwritten in calligraphy and illustrated with 125 ink-and-charcoal drawings, that book was published in 1982, the same year as Earl’s Walking with Spring, and both are still in print.
The Appalachian Trail Conservancy’s publisher, Brian King, told me that for years Earl would stop in at ATC’s headquarters whenever he was in the area. The two men would sit and chat, and Earl would still tear up, decades later, when he spoke about the loss of his friend Walter. Perhaps what was most therapeutic for Earl after hiking the trail was how he designed his life. He had realized that finding a sense of purpose larger than himself was critical for healing. It is especially important for those who suffer with depression, which often accompanies PTSD, along with low self-esteem, finding little to no pleasure in anything, and holding at best a dim sense of hope for the future.
After his journey on the Appalachian Trail, Earl went on to build, maintain, and relocate the trail; construct shelters; organize trail clubs; and share advice with new and fellow hikers. Hiking the trail gave Earl his life back, and in turn he devoted his life to the trail. In 1965, feeling “restless and at loose ends,” Earl successfully hiked the entire Appalachian Trail a second time. And at the age of seventy-nine, on the fiftieth anniversary of his first thru-hike, he hiked it a third time. A lot of trail magic was extended to him on that third hike, for Earl had since turned into a trail hero. Earl died five years later, after a lifetime of paving the way for long-distance hikers, many of whom are veterans.
THE DESK ON WHICH I WROTE THIS BOOK WAS A GIFT FROM EARL. IT SITS in the hand-hewn log cabin that my husband, Todd, built for me. During a visit to Earl’s home, Todd and I were invited to explore his barn of refinished antiques and found a perfect American chestnut table with thick turned legs that he had stripped of paint. Countless times, I’ve slid my hands over the table’s smooth wooden surface, knowing that Earl’s hands rubbed oil into its grain. Since Earl thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail in 1948, more than twenty thousand hikers have completed the same journey. He helped to create a whole culture of people, including America’s veterans, who go to our trails seeking health, rejuvenation, and peace on their own terms. The trail provides.
CHAPTER 2
STEVE CLENDENNING
US MARINE CORPS, 1992 – 2013
If you bring forth what is inside you, what you bring forth will save you. If you don’t bring forth what is inside you, what you bring forth can destroy you.
—Gospel of Thomas, 70
WITH RAINSTICK IN HAND, STEVE Clendenning slumped low in his chair by the campfire. He had just shared some effects his wartime memories had on his body and his soul. Taking a break before continuing, he rocked gently as if to shake his words free. Surrounded by the Pennsylvania woods and a few other hikers, Steve stroked his blond beard over and over with his left hand. His southern drawl broke as he shared his story of war in Iraq.
“We were doing a road sweep in Fallujah,” Steve began, “covering the street with a mine detector. It was pitch black out and we were wearing night goggles. That particular road was a mess with mines. It even got the nickname, IED Alley.” The first team leader and the engineer spotted a hole in the road where an IED had blown up the night before. The hole had not been filled in, so the team climbed in to check it out. “All of a sudden it blew,” he recalled. When Steve turned on the Humvee’s white lights, he saw flesh and blood at his feet. A Marine ran toward him with a devastating report: “Staff Sergeant, I found him and it’s just his torso.” Steve approached and said a prayer to God for the deceased. “I walked another one hundred meters down the road and found his leg and more pieces. We scraped up his remains and put his body parts in the back of the truck. He was my buddy.”
Raising his lowered eyes from the flickering fire, Steve stared outward before picking up the thread. “The next morning my truck got blown to shit by an IED,” he said. “After we opened fire and chased down the insurgents, we went to the hospital. I had traumatic brain injury and my hearing was severely damaged. I never felt normal again.”
He asked himself, “How can you walk up to your friend and find him like that and not have it profoundly impact you for the rest of your life? How could you come back from that?” With his blue eyes shaded by a brimmed camouflage hat, his boyish face revealed the answer: you don’t. Like World War II veteran Earl Shaffer had before him, Steve was walking off his war as he hiked the length of the Appalachian Trail, to rid the demons from his head, to heal from his PTSD. This was a different kind of mission.
NEXT TO STEVE THAT EVENING AROUND THE CAMPFIRE SAT HIS WIFE, RUBY Clendenning, a striking long-haired woman of Mexican descent. Her arm embraced her husband’s shoulders. A Marine herself, Ruby also suffered from PTSD, a result of sexual assault in the military. Although the cause of the trauma was different, Ruby understood her husband’s pain.
“Back then, I could not go into public places,” Steve said. “I was on too many medications and behaved like a zombie. I was in a complete funk, would not shower, or eat.” On the one-year anniversary of the exploding-IED injury and losing his friend, Steve tried to take his own life. “I got drunk out of my mind. I moved the car out of the garage, opened up the ladder to the attic door, and fashioned an extension cord into a noose which I hung from the rafters.” He doesn’t know how he did it—he had never tied a noose before. He stood on the ladder with his phone in his hand, texting everyone he loved. “I could not stand the images in my brain anymore, or the nightmares, and I wanted them to go away.” At the exact right moment, Ruby walked into the garage and found Steve. She had woken in the middle of the night, rolled over in bed, and noticed he was gone. She had searched the house for him, fortunately finding him in time..
Steve was put into a psychiatrist’s care. He spent four years at the Marine Corps Wounded Warrior Battalion located at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. After retiring from the military, he’s been going to doctors, attending weekly counseling, and having brain