On
29 May 1953, Sir Edmund Percival
Hillary
and Nepalese Sherpa mountaineer Tenzing Norgay became the first climbers to
reach the summit of Mount Everest. They were part of the ninth British expedition
to Everest, led by John Hunt. In 1952, Tenzing Norgay was part of a Swiss
Expedition which had fallen short of Mount Everest by 240 meters due to weather
and exhaustion.
Hillary
and Norgay had carved out a professional relationship as they both trained
together for the treacherous climb through Khumbu Icefall. The final Camp at
South Col was set up by the Hunt Expedition at 7890 Meters. The first of the
two climbers of the expedition, Bourdillon and Evans, attempted the summit on
26 May 1953. They fell short by 91 Meters as Evans’ oxygen system failed in
those trying conditions. Hillary and Tenzing then made the second attempt.
Snow
and wind held the pair up at the South Col for two days. On the morning of 28
May 1953, Hillary and Tenzing set out with a support trio of Lowe, Alfred Gregory and Ang Nyima.
The two pitched a tent at 8,500 m on 28 May while their support group
returned down the mountain. On the following morning, Hillary discovered that
his boots had frozen solid outside the tent. He spent two hours warming them
before he and Tenzing attempted the final ascent wearing 14 kg packs.
The crucial move of the last part of the ascent was the 12 m rock face
later named the "Hillary
Step".
Hillary saw a means to wedge his way up a crack in the face between the rock
wall and the ice and Tenzing followed. From there on the balance effort was
relatively simple. Tenzing Norgay stated in his narration "The
Dream Comes True" that Hillary had indeed taken the first step
atop Mount Everest, despite Hillary quoting that both had reached the summit at
the same time. They reached Everest's 8,848 m summit, the highest point on
earth, at 11:30 am on 29 May 1953. As Hillary put it, "A few more
whacks of the ice axe in the firm snow, and we stood on top."
What
would have been the thoughts of Hillary and Tenzing as they packed their bags
to make the final assault on the virgin peak of Mt Everest? The day would have
dawned with its own peculiarities on 8500 meters above the Mean Sea Level. All
the previous days of the expedition were now events of past utilized for
acclimatization, training and climb. 29 May 1953 was a brand new day for both
the climbers and they had a mission to scale. The only baggage they carried was
physical in nature and weighed 14 Kgs each pack. With their eyes set on the top
of the summit, they would have both made a careful climb up the mountain. They
did not carry any radio sets to communicate their climb with the base camp.
Everything that they both were tasked to achieve had to be done on that day- 29
May 1953. Each passing day would have only made their task difficult and worn
off their spirits. The mission would keep on getting critical with the ticking
away off the clock. The choices are limited when time starts wearing away
towards darkness. Both Hillary and Tenzing did what was supposed to be done-
they climbed the Mount Everest in a day on that fateful day of May 1953. In the
history books, both got etched forever as the first climbers to scale the
tallest mountain and the singular date 29 May 1953 became a landmark date.
In
any human life, the time spans can be large but the days of milestones are
unique and singular. Humans prepare in their own myriad ways for various
challenges and adventures of the maze called life. Who knows what they
encounter in between or how they shape up plans to meet the exigencies? The
magic of successful humans lies in circumventing/taking challenges head on and
achieve the tasks on the designated day. The significance of each day lies in
the achievements scaled in its span of 24 hours. Humans learn and practice to
be ready for the D-day. Everything, therefore, does happen in a day!! Some may
contest this assumption but what is the harm in getting pinned to the ideology
that each day is important and much can be achieved if the focus is correct.
A
student prepares the whole year to write that elusive exam on the D-Day, an
astronaut trains for that perfect take off on the D-Day, the project are
matched for various timelines to meet the D-day etc. In almost each human
activity, the day is an important constituent. A lost day cannot be regained.
All practice is void if the target cannot be captured on the D-Day. Each one of
the humans have the capability to awaken themselves to capture their day and to
achieve the climb. The will power factor plays an important role in shaping the
human destiny. No human activity is easy, but on the flip side no activity is
such complex that the little climbs associated with them cannot even be
attempted. Each failure can be converted into First Effort in Learning (FAIL)
and each end can be termed as Effort Never Dies (END). In every No there can be
the Next Opportunity (NO). There is no better adage that “Each Day Counts”.
After all, the final climb happens in a day only.
Edmund
Hillary and Tenzing Norgay dreamt years about climbing the Mount Everest and
climbed for 07 grueling weeks before they dug the final axe on the peak at 1130
hrs on 29 May 1953. The climb was done in a day.
Each
day, all of us are preparing and practicing for the respective climbs in
various fields. The D-day arrives with each of its moment etched with
precision. The time does not stand still ever. We have to gather ourselves up
on all possible fronts and make the first move for the climb. Each step takes
us closer to the summit. Finally, the last axe is dug deep onto the summit and
it provides the last help to scale the highest point. The height of success
dwarfs everything else- though momentarily as the next challenge starts
unfolding its majestic climb. So, keep putting out those steps in the right
direction to achieve the climb in a day.

