September, 2022
One foot
in front of the other I trudge up the mountain. The hike seems impossibly long.
Mike shared his cold with me, but he has long since recovered while I hike congested
and coughing and on day three. Twice I collapsed on a nearby rotting log and I
ask him if we really want to hike today? Do we realllly? His words are
surprisingly upbeat as he comments on the altitude we already gained and on how
nice it will be once we hit the alpine. In hindsight, I never thought to raise
my eyebrows at Mike, the ever realist, who wasn’t one for overly positive words
of encouragement. We were planning to stay for three nights, and I can’t recall
my backpack ever feeling this heavy, I’m not sure if that’s due to the head
cold or by simply living off of Thai food at the beginning of the summer.

I breath
in the sweet forest scents and wood smoke from the campfire. I inhale long and
deep and for the first time since unexpectedly returning to Canada, I look at Mike
sipping his Bud, and I focused on the right now. We talk about everything that
stresses us and everything that excites us: Mike has incorporated and is subcontracting
for a local mine and sawmill (Mac Attack Millwrighting). He’s talked about owning his own business since
the very beginning, so this is a huge and difficult goal. I’m dabbling in the agriculture
industry and it’s nothing what I thought it would be like (I've long since left and went back to the mine).
After savoring two cups of camp coffee, my favorite type of coffee, and having
some oatmeal for breakfast Mike suggests that we hike to Arrow Lake. Last
summer we hiked to the peak of Passby, and we spottled the lake from up top. The
hike today isn’t nearly as strenuous without overnight backpacks on, and I’m
feeling much better than the day before. Mike admits his sleep was terrible due
to me open mouthed snoring while facing him all night long - I’m a keeper!
We make our way above the alpine, going across the mountain, not directly up it, and cross three large voids, with small streams at the center. I find an old caribou shed, which was amazing, since they haven’t been on this mountains in about a hundred years, Mike explains; there’s only moose in this area now. After detouring a couple of times from finding and loosing the path, we walk across the scree toward the clear blue waters of Arrow Lake. After a leisurely lunch consisting of Mr. Noodles, to get a better view of the lake, we climb up the rolling hill. Mike suggests continuing in a final attempt of finding the second lake and a cabin we were told about. The long grass rubs my legs with the wind pushing against us, and I’m staring at my feet in attempts of not getting tangled in the wild grass. I look up to a beautiful view without a lake or cabin and swear to myself knowing Mike will push on to go up just one more hill. He says something about how he’d doesn’t matter how many corners or mountains we climb as long as he's in it with me, but this is a lose paraphrase because I was thinking about yet another damn hill we needed to climb and that I was mouth breathing harrrd already, when I look up and he’s holding rings.

Mike never actually said the words, he only held out a stunning second-hand ring, gifted by his sister, which means the world, originally his Grandma Anne’s. I think I said various words like wow and sputtered a lot. And Mike laughed. And I took the rings. It fits perfectly; a perfect sign of a sure thing.
Later, Mike told me he would have gotten down on one knee, but he knew I was a feminist. And it was just the most perfect proposal.
Kirstin
My best relationship advice: Make sure you're the crazy one.

Congrats!!
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