The 12 Rules of Survival Laurence Gonzales, Based on his book Deep Survival (W.W. Norton & Co.)
As a journalist, I've
been writing about accidents for more than thirty years. In the last 15 or so
years, I've concentrated on accidents in outdoor recreation, in an effort to
understand who lives, who dies, and why. To my surprise, I found an eerie
uniformity in the way people survive seemingly impossible circumstances.
Decades and sometimes centuries apart, separated by culture, geography, race,
language, and tradition, the most successful survivors–those who practice what
I call “deep survival”–go through the same patterns of thought and behavior,
the same transformation and spiritual discovery, in the course of keeping
themselves alive. Not only that but it doesn't seem to matter whether they are
surviving being lost in the wilderness or battling cancer, whether they're
struggling through divorce or facing a business catastrophe–the strategies
remain the same.
Survival should be
thought of as a journey, a vision quest of the sort that Native Americans have
had as a rite of passage for thousands of years. Once you're past the
precipitating event–you're cast away at sea or told you have cancer–you have
been enrolled in one of the oldest schools in history. Here are a few things
I've learned that can help you pass the final exam.
1.
Perceive and Believe
Don't fall into
the deadly trap of denial or of immobilizing fear. Admit it: You're really in
trouble and you're going to have to get yourself out.
Many people who in the World Trade Center on September
11, 2001,
died simply because they told themselves that everything was going to be all
right. Others panicked. Panic doesn't necessarily mean screaming and running
around. Often it means simply doing nothing. Survivors don't candy-coat the
truth, but they also don't give in to hopelessness in the face of it.
Survivors see
opportunity, even good, in their situation, however grim. After the ordeal is
over, people may be surprised to hear them say it was the best thing that ever
happened to them. Viktor Frankl, who spent three years in Auschwitz and other Nazi concentration
camps, describes comforting a woman who was dying. She told him, “I am grateful
that fate has hit me so hard. In m former life I was spoiled and did not take
spiritual accomplishments seriously.”
The phases of the
survival journey roughly parallel the five stages of death once described by
Elizabeth Kubler Ross in her book On Death and Dying: Denial, anger,
bargaining, depression, and acceptance. In dire circumstances, a survivor moves
through those stages rapidly to acceptance of his situation, then resolves to
do something to save himself. Survival depends on telling yourself, “Okay, I'm
here. This is really happening. Now I'm going to do the next right thing to get
myself out.” Whether you succeed or not ultimately becomes irrelevant. It is in
acting well–even suffering well–that you give meaning to whatever life you have
to live.
2. Stay Calm – Use
Your Anger
In the initial
crisis, survivors are not ruled by fear; instead, they make use of it. Their
fear often feels like (and turns into) anger, which motivates them and makes
them feel sharper. Aron Ralston, the hiker who had to cut off his hand to free
himself from a stone that had trapped him in a slot canyon in Utah, initially panicked and began
slamming himself over and over against the boulder that had caught his hand.
But very quickly, he stopped himself, did some deep breathing, and began
thinking about his options. He eventually spent five days progressing through
the stages necessary to convince him of what decisive action he had to take to
save his own life.
When Lance Armstrong,
six-time winner of the Tour de France, awoke from brain surgery for his cancer,
he first felt gratitude. “But then I felt a second wave, of anger... I was
alive, and I was mad.” When friends asked him how he was doing, he responded,
“I'm doing great... I like it like this. I like the odds stacked against me...
I donÕt know any other way.” That's survivor thinking.
Survivors also manage
pain well. As a bike racer, Armstrong had had long training in enduring pain,
even learning to love it. James Stockdale, a fighter pilot who was shot down in
Vietnam and spent eight years in the
Hanoi Hilton, as his prison camp was known, advised those who would learn to
survive: “One should include a course of familiarization with pain. You have to
practice hurting. There is no question about it.”
3. Think, Analyze, and
Plan
Survivors quickly
organize, set up routines, and institute discipline.
When Lance Armstrong was diagnosed with cancer, he organized his fight against
it the way he would organize his training for a race. He read everything he
could about it, put himself on a training schedule, and put together a team
from among friends, family, and doctors to support his efforts. Such conscious,
organized effort in the face of grave danger requires a split between reason
and emotion in which reason gives direction and emotion provides the power
source. Survivors often report experiencing reason as an audible “voice.”
Steve Callahan, a sailor
and boat designer, was rammed by a whale and sunk while on a solo voyage in
1982. Adrift in the Atlantic for 76 days in a five-and-a-half-foot raft, he experienced his
survival voyage as taking place under the command of a “captain,” who gave him
his orders and kept him on his water ration, even as his own mutinous
(emotional) spirit complained. His captain routinely lectured “the crew.” Thus
under strict control, he was able to push away thoughts that his situation was
hopeless and take the necessary first steps of the survival journey: to think
clearly, analyze his situation, and formulate a plan.
4. Take Correct,
Decisive Action
Survivors are
willing to take risks to save themselves and others. But they are
simultaneously bold and cautious in what they will do. Lauren Elder was the
only survivor of a light plane crash in high sierra. Stranded on a peak above
12,000 feet, one arm broken, she could see the San Joaquin Valley in California below, but a vast wilderness and
sheer and icy cliffs separated her from it. Wearing a wrap-around skirt and
blouse, with two-inch heeled boots and not even wearing underwear, she crawled
“on all fours, doing a kind of sideways spiderwalk,” as she put it later,
“balancing myself on the ice crust, punching through it with my hands and
feet.”
She had 36 hours of
climbing ahead of her–a seemingly impossible task. But Elder allowed herself to
think only as far as the next big rock. Survivors break down large jobs into
small, manageable tasks. They set attainable goals and develop short-term plans
to reach them. They are meticulous about doing those tasks well. Elder tested
each hold before moving forward and stopped frequently to rest. They make very
few mistakes. They handle what is within their power to deal with from moment
to moment, hour to hour, day to day.
5. Celebrate your
success
Survivors take
great joy from even their smallest successes. This helps keep motivation high
and prevents a lethal plunge into hopelessness. It also provides relief from
the unspeakable strain of a life-threatening situation. Elder said that once
she had completed her descent of the first pitch, she looked up at the
impossibly steep slope and thought, “Look what you've done...Exhilarated, I
gave a whoop that echoed down the silent pass.” Even with a broken arm, joy was
Elder's constant companion. A good survivor always tells herself: count your
blessings–you're alive. Viktor Frankl wrote of how he felt at times in Auschwitz: “How content we were; happy in
spite of everything.”
6. Be a Rescuer, Not a
Victim
Survivors are always doing what they do for someone else, even if that
someone is thousands of miles away. There are numerous strategies for doing
this. When Antoine Saint-Exupery was stranded in the Lybian desert after his
mail plane suffered an engine failure, he thought of how his wife would suffer
if he gave up and didn't return. Yossi Ghinsberg, a young Israeli hiker, was
lost in the Bolivian jungle for more than two weeks after becoming separated
from his friends. He hallucinated a beautiful companion with whom he slept each
night as he traveled. Everything he did, he did for her. People cannot survive
for themselves alone; their must be a higher motive.
Viktor
Frankl put it this way: “Don't aim at success–the more you aim at it and make
it a target,the more you are going to miss it.” He suggests taking it as “the
unintended side-effect of one's personal dedication to a cause greater than
oneself or as the by-product of one's surrender to a person other than
oneself.”
7. Enjoy the Survival
Journey
It may seem
counterintuitive, but even in the worst circumstances, survivors find something
to enjoy, some way to play and laugh. Survival can be tedious, and waiting
itself is an art. Elder found herself laughing out loud when she started to
worry that someone might see up her skirt as she climbed. Even as Callahan's
boat was sinking, he stopped to laugh at himself as he clutched a knife in his
teeth like a pirate while trying to get into his life raft. And Viktor Frankl
ordered some of his companions in Auschwitz who were threatening to give up
hope to force themselves to think of one funny thing each day.
Survivors also use the
intellect to stimulate, calm, and entertain the mind. While moving across a
near-vertical cliff face in Peru, Joe Simpson developed a rhythmic pattern of
placing his ax, plunging his other arm into the snow face, and then making a
frightening little hop with his good leg. “I meticulously repeated the pattern,”
he wrote later. “I began to feel detached from everything around me.”
Singing, playing mind
games, reciting poetry, counting anything, and doing mathematical problems in
your head can make waiting possible and even pleasant, even while heightening
perception and quieting fear. Stockdale wrote, “The person who came into this
experiment with reams of already memorized poetry was the bearer of great
gifts.”
When Lance Armstrong was
undergoing horrible chemotherapy, his mantra became his blood count: “Those
numbers became the highlight of each day; they were my motivation... I would
concentrate on that number, as if I could make the counts by mentally willing
it.”
Lost in the Bolivian
jungle, Yossi Ghinsberg reported, “When I found myself feeling hopeless, I
whispered my mantra, ‘Man of action, man of action.’ I don't know where I had
gotten the phrase... I repeated it over and over: A man of action does whatever
he must, isn't afraid, and doesn't worry.”
Survivors engage their
crisis almost as an athlete engages a sport. They cling to talismans. They
discover the sense of flow of the expert performer, the “zone” in which emotion
and thought balance each other in producing fluid action. A playful approach to
a critical situation also leads to invention, and invention may lead to a new
technique, strategy, or design that could save you.
8. See the Beauty
Survivors are
attuned to the wonder of their world, especially in the face of mortal danger.
The appreciation of beauty, the feeling of awe, opens the senses to the
environment. (When you see something beautiful, your pupils actually dilate.)
Debbie Kiley and four others were adrift in the Atlantic after their boat sank in a
hurricane in 1982. They had no supplies, no water, and would die without
rescue. Two of the crew members drank sea water and went mad. When one of them
jumped overboard and was being eaten by sharks directly under their dinghy,
Kiley felt as if she, too, were going mad, and told herself, “Focus on the sky,
on the beauty there.”
When Saint-Exupery's
plane went down in the Lybian Desert, he was certain that he was
doomed, but he carried on in this spirit: “Here we are, condemned to death, and
still the certainty of dying cannot compare with the pleasure I am feeling. The
joy I take from this half an orange which I am holding in my hand is one of the
greatest joys I have ever known.” At no time did he stop to bemoan his fate, or
if he did, it was only to laugh at himself.
9. Believe That You
Will Succeed
It is at this
point, following what I call “the vision,” that the survivor's will to live
becomes firmly fixed. Fear of dying falls away, and a new strength fills them
with the power to go on. “During the final two days of my entrapment,” Ralston
recalled, “I felt an increasing reserve of energy, even though I had run out of
food and water.” Elder said, “I felt rested and filled with a peculiar energy.”
And: “It was as if I had been granted an unlimited supply of energy.”
10. Surrender
Yes you might
die. In fact, you wil die–we all do. But perhaps it doesn't have to be today.
Don't let it worry you. Forget about rescue. Everything you need is inside you
already. Dougal Robertson, a sailor who was cast away at sea for thirty-eight
days after his boat sank, advised thinking of survival this way: “Rescue will
come as a welcome interruption of... the survival voyage.” One survival
psychologist calls that “resignation without giving up. It is survival by
surrender.”
Simpson reported, “I
would probably die out there amid those boulders. The thought didn't alarm
me... the horror of dying no longer affected me.” The Tao Te Ching explains how
this surrender leads to survival:
The rhinoceros has no place to jab its horn,
The tiger has no place to fasten its claws,
Weapons have no place to admit their blades.
Now,
What is the reason for this?
Because on him there are no mortal spots.
11. Do Whatever Is
Necessary
Elder
down-climbed vertical ice and rock faces with no experience and no equipment.
In the black of night, Callahan dove into the flooded saloon of his sinking
boat, at once risking and saving his life. Aron Ralston cut off his own arm to
free himself. A cancer patient allows herself to be nearly killed by
chemotherapy in order to live.
Survivors have a reason
to live and are willing to bet everything on themselves. They have what
psychologists call meta-knowledge: They know their abilities and do not over–or
underestimate them. They believe that anything is possible and act accordingly.
12. Never Give Up
When Apollo 13's
oxygen tank exploded, apparently dooming the crew, Commander Jim Lovell chose
to keep on transmitting whatever data he could back to mission control, even as
they burned up on re-entry. Simpson, Elder, Callahan, Kiley, Stockdale,
Ghinsberg–were all equally determined and knew this final truth: If you're
still alive, there is always one more thing that you can do.
Survivors are not easily
discouraged by setbacks. They accept that the environment is constantly
changing and know that they must adapt. When they fall, they pick themselves up
and start the entire process over again, breaking it down into manageable bits.
Survivors always have a
clear reason for going on. They keep their spirits up by developing an
alternate world, created from rich memories, into which they can escape. They
see opportunity in adversity. In the aftermath, survivors learn from and are
grateful for the experiences that they've had. As Elder told me once, “I
wouldn't trade that experience for anything. And sometimes I even miss it. I
miss the clarity of knowing exactly what you have to do next.”
Those who would survive
the hazards of our world, whether at play or in business or at war, through
illness or financial calamity, will do so through a journey of transformation.
But that transcendent state doesn't miraculously appear when it is needed. It
wells up from a lifetime of experiences, attitudes, and practices form one's
personality, a core from which the necessary strength is drawn. A survival
experience is an incomparable gift: It will tell you who you really are.
© 2005 Laurence Gonzales
Reprinted by permission of the author. All rights reserved.
Laurence Gonzales is the
author of Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who
Dies, and Why (W.W. Norton & Co., New York) and contributing editor for National Geographic Adventure magazine.
The winner of numerous awards, he has written for Harper’s, Atlantic Monthly, Conde Nast Traveler, Rolling Stone, among others. He has
published a dozen books, including two award-winning collections of essays,
three novels, and the book-length essay, One
Zero Charlie published by Simon & Schuster. For more, go to www.deepsurvival.com.