Our Nightmare Ski Trip: Get Back Up One More Time

7 comments
The ski shop cabin in Ukraine

I'm somewhere in the mountains of western Ukraine, in a tiny cabin functioning as a ski rental shop. It's run by a man and his three sons, who are 8, 10, and 12. They were offered to us as ski instructors, but no one there speaks one word of English, and we don't speak Ukrainian or Russian.

My friend Volodya really wanted to take us skiing ever since I mentioned I liked to ski. He began planning a trip to Slovakia, then realized we didn't have time and said we would go to the local place.

The "local" place is actually a 4.5-hour drive from where we were, which isn't so bad, except that Volodya's time management needs some work. He said he was picking us up at 8 am, but it turned into noon. I would have protested going, but I wrongly assumed it was 30 minutes to an hour away.

I'm also with my teenage/young adult daughters Dimitra, Dalia, and Dafni, as well as Dafni's boyfriend (now husband) Nathaniel, my son Dino, John, and Kate, a 22-year-old family friend from Kiev. We are a motley crew of both experienced skiers (Volodya, Nathaniel, and I) and beginners, all wearing borrowed ski suits, hats, and gloves. We keep teasing each other about who looks more ridiculous in our 20-year-old ski bibs.

With about an hour left of daylight, we finally get our lift tickets, skis, boots, and poles. This fact is exceptionally annoying, except that our tickets and rentals cost less than $20 in total. I told Volodya very clearly multiple times that my three girls plus Kate are complete beginners and have only skied twice, ten years ago when they were kids. It was Kate's first time. Volodya assured me that we were going on the green run, the beginner-level hill.

A Steep Surprise

Elli and the group get their skis and equipment

We were ominously the only people at this ski location, yet the snow conditions were perfect. It had just snowed, and everything was untouched. My heart ached that we didn't get here earlier to enjoy this. I would only get one or two runs, and on a green hill, no less. But I was grateful that the girls were getting this experience despite the nine hours we were spending in a car.

The chair lift stopped for the girls to get on because of their lack of experience. I had hoped that it would be pretty flat up top when they got off. On the way up a very long run, much longer than I expected, I said to Volodya, "This looks pretty steep and difficult, not at all like a green run." Volodya casually replied, "Yes, green run closed because of storm, so only blue is open."

My head did a 360, trying to grasp the entirety of his short yet frightening sentence. "Volodya! Blue! Storm!! Why didn't you tell us before we got on?! There is no way those girls can ski this!" Their blue (intermediate) run is more like an indigo, with parts of it looking like black diamond to me. Volodya shrugged, feeling like all would be well. Volodya's English isn't so great, so as I looked out into the thick gray sky that was beginning to turn to dusk, I wondered if the storm had just happened or was about to happen.

When I saw the get-off point, my heart sank. It was not flat at all but steep, with an open cliff just before it. I mustered every ounce of coolness to keep from panicking. I shouted, "Girls! Keep your ski tips up, all the way up, as you get off. Pizza, not French fries!!!" That was how we distinguished the snow plow formation of skis to go slow versus the parallel ski formation to go fast.

Dimitra, Dalia, and Kate were first and successfully got off the chair, but very soon after, they fell into a ski-pole-girl ball tangled into each other, blocking the path as the next chair delivered Nathaniel and Dafni. Dafni completed the pile of bodies as Nathaniel skillfully avoided them. Now, we were approaching the pile, but we managed to get off and avoid skiing over them.

As we helped everyone up and found a flat spot to regroup, there was definite anger, panic, and frustration within the troop. "Do we have to ski that?!" "It's getting dark!" "How are we gonna get down this mountain?!" "You said this was for beginners!" Everyone was yelling at me all at once.

"Guys! Listen, you can do this. We will go slow, and if it is too scary or steep, then you just take your skis off and slide down on your butt. Volodya just told me on the chair lift that they closed the green slope, and we only have this one."

Now there was panic: "I can't do it! No way! Impossible! This is too scary! We are beginners. We're going to get hurt!"

"You can do it! We will help you and show you how. Just try."

Pizza, French Fries, and Faceplants

With that we begin to ski down the first part of the mountain. I see Volodya starting to feel guilty and choose to take on Dimitra and Dalia showing them how to traverse sideways across the mountain and attempt to teach them how to turn. I take Kate, while Nathaniel works with Dafni, who seems to follow Nathaniel with minimal spills. Kate was somewhat of a natural and understood how to snowplow or make a pizza shape right away. She fell, too, but mostly giggled when she did.

We all wait together at the bottom of the first part of the hill, which admittedly isn't as bad as some parts I saw on the way up. I look up towards the top and see Dimitra and Dalia really struggling and Volodya speaking emphatically to them, waving his arms. I think I see both girls crying, but I can't be sure. I decide to side-step up the mountain to see what is happening. After 10 minutes of climbing, we meet each other, and both girls start screaming through tears as they see me: "There is no way we can ski this! We want to go home! We hate this! We're going to die!"

I try to tell them that they can slide down on their butts when it is steep and walk down when it isn't. They absolutely refuse and say they aren't skiing one more second. Volodya looks exasperated and suggests they walk back up to the top and take the lift down. The girls calm down and light up at hearing the suggestion.

"Okay, that sounds like a plan; take off your skis and carry them up. You didn't make it too far, so it shouldn't take you too long." We agreed that we'd see each other at the bottom and watched them as they worked their way up toward the top. I get one or two minutes actually skiing as I meet the others downhill.

Volodya tells us that he is going to ski down fast so he can get back on the chair lift to see if Dimitra and Dalia are okay at the top. I decide to keep helping Kate, and Nathaniel will help Dafni. We get moving because it is getting dark, and we may only have 20 minutes of light left. The wind has picked up while the fresh powder snow is blowing into us.

The pattern with Kate is pizza as she crosses the hill and begins her turn, then she can't quite make it around and winds up in French fries, pointing straight downhill. She flies for a while until she splatters. I ski behind her and pick up the skis, poles, hat, gloves, and whatever else falls off her.

I find her usually with a face full of snow, blinking and laughing. It takes a while to get her back up, knock all the snow off the bottom of her boots, and get her back on her skis, pointing in the right direction. I try to show her how to turn, and I'm certain she understands and has full intention to copy what I showed her, but just can't get her body to do it. Still, she proved tough and hardy despite her girly girl persona.

We made pretty good headway, but I honestly didn't know how long this run actually was or where to go. There were no other skiers to follow, and I wondered about bears eating us, but I just kept going downhill, hoping the bottom would come soon. I also wondered about Dafni and Nathaniel since they were somewhere behind us, out of sight.

It is now bona fide nighttime. Thick clouds hide the moon, snow is falling heavily, and the wind makes me wonder if this could be my first blizzard. Kate's giggling turned to irritation and growls after she spills for the 15th time. I'm sure she was sore, frustrated, cold, and probably not going to ever try skiing again.

I tried to keep encouraging her and telling her she was tough and doing a great job, but I was pretty worried. I didn't know how these foreign Ukrainian slopes work. Were we skiing off into oblivion? Did I miss a path somewhere? Would we die from bears, avalanches, or some freaky snow leopard? I realized I was in a very precarious situation. Although it was difficult, dark, and dangerous, we had no choice but to just keep going.

Worst Mother Ever

Skiing in Ukraine

Finally, we turned a corner as the hill turned into a flatter path, and I could see far in the distance the chair lift! Hallelujah!!! I managed to contain my excitement like I knew it was there all along, and by now Kate could ski pretty straight in her French fry position while it was more flat. So we sailed right along to the chair lift.

Just as we get to it, I hear from above as if heaven was speaking, "YOU. ARE. THE. WORST. MOTHER. EVER!!!" I look up and see Dalia and Dimitra riding the chair lift down, swinging from side to side in the wind, clutching to the rails with angry faces.

"Hey! Girls! There you are! I'm so glad to see you! I'll meet you at the bottom."

Dalia is right. I think I might be the worst mother ever.

Who drags their kids to a mountain in the middle of Ukraine, buys a ski lift ticket, and gets on a chair lift without even reading reviews or knowing where she is to tell authorities if need be. John and Dino are waiting for us at the "lodge," and I am sure I will be met with a mix of relief and "I told you so."

Finally, Kate and I can see the bottom. I see Volodya walking up the hill towards us with his arms open, yelling, "Elli, Elli, Elli, I found you!" He found me? What? He's the one who got us into this mess, and he most certainly did not find me. He was at the bottom of the hill while I had been in a dark blizzard with bears, lions, and dragons for an hour and a half, picking up the pieces of Kate.

I skied right past Volodya and thought about spraying him with snow as I passed. I went to Dimitra and Dalia, who were shouting in unison all kinds of nonsense that I couldn't understand. I told them to wait and tell me after we find Dafni.

John was there with Dino and said he had Volodya call the ski rescue to go up with a snowmobile and find Dafni and Nathaniel. Although they were both super angry with me, I grabbed the girls, hugged them, and told them I was sorry. I didn't know it wasn't for beginners until we were already riding up in the chair.

Volodya made his way back to us and told us that they found Dafni and Nathaniel, and they were coming. "Thank God!" I felt so relieved and thought I wouldn't kill Volodya anymore, just injure him.

Within a few minutes, the snowmobile arrived, with Nathaniel looking pretty angry and Dafni softly crying but not hurt. The ski patrol got off his vehicle and started yelling at Volodya in some pretty fierce Russian. Volodya just kept his hands up, trying to explain something.

After the altercation, Volodya said, "It's okay. Don't worry. He is upset because you are first Americans to come to ski slope and I lose you in blizzard." He patted my back as if to say, "Ha! What fun we had!"

Dimitra and Dalia's Side of the Story

Snowy mountains as seen out of the car window

Once in the car facing our 4.5-hour drive home partially in a snowstorm, Dimitra and Dalia start talking over each other, trying to tell the rest of us how they almost died and how awful I am to bring them there. It took a while to understand what happened, but here is the story:

They hike back up the hill and ask the chair lift operator at the top to stop the chair lift and let them on to go back down. He doesn't speak English. He's telling them no and pointing downhill. They say they can't ski, they can't go downhill, and they have to ride the chair. He just keeps telling them no. So he gets out of his little operation booth and motions for them to go with him to the nearby cabin.

They walk inside and see two other men. Dimitra and Dalia figure that one of them must speak English, and that's why the other man told them to go there. So they explain again how they don't know how to ski, and they can't go down the mountain, so they need to take the chair back down. But the men don't speak English.

They point to the kitchen and pot on the stove, then point to the bed and say, "Spats, spats." Dimitra and Dalia yell, "No! No way," and point outside yelling, "Chair, chair." The men shake their heads no and point to the pot and the bed, saying, "Spats." One of the men walks over to the bed, points to the girls, and pats the bed, saying, "Spats." The girls start to freak out and cry. They run to the door, push it open, and leave.

At this point in the story, Volodya breaks in laughing, "No, girls. They are fathers. You are safe. He says "spats" for sleep. He tells you to sleep there. He give you food and you sleep. Nothing bad." Volodya is amused. The girls say they don't care. It was so scary, and they thought everything was weird. There was no way they were staying in some cabin with three men and eating soup.

"My God! I don't blame you! That's terrifying," I say. "How did you get on the chair lift?"

"He saw how upset we were and how much we were crying, so he gave in and let us get on," Dalia says.

"Look, guys, I'm so sorry this happened. I hated every minute of it myself. Poor Kate splattered the whole way down the mountain and ate 100 pounds of snow. Dafni was stuck and couldn't even ski. You guys thought you would…God knows what. On top of all of that, it was dark and during a snowstorm. I mean, we couldn't imagine a worse thing. Sometimes, weird things like this happen, but what's important is how you handle it. We have to have grit, tough it out, and fight through those things."

That last part really got me in trouble.

"Fight through? Have grit? Are you crazy?!!" Dalia yells. "We could have died, or been lost and frozen, or raped, or eaten by wild animals, or broken our bones falling off the mountain. You don't just bring your kids up to some mountain somewhere in a blizzard at night and tell them to have more grit!" That was the last word. A very angry last word. And then there was silence.

Navigating the Dark and Snowy Mountain

After reeling through piles of wretched guilt and remorse, I came through the other side and thought about it more. Maybe what Dalia said is true.

But maybe it's not.

Kate had never skied before in her entire life. She didn't freak out or refuse to try. She didn't give up after one fall. She picked herself up, reorganized, and tried again. She fell too many times to count and got back up one more time than she fell until she found the bottom of the mountain. I told her to slide down on her butt after every time she fell, but she wanted to keep trying. She didn't cry or yell at me or blame me for what was happening.

She did her best with her circumstances, even though she got frustrated and was surely tired of falling and eating snow. Yes, she was cold and had had enough, but she still found grit and pushed through.

Why is there such a difference between Kate and the other girls? Maybe her parents taught her better.

I have tried my best to make my kids finish what they start. Push through when things get tough. Don't ever give up. Hold the line, and so on. But Ukrainians have a culture of suffering and grit. Just for Kate to go to the store in winter, she has to walk far through the cold snow, carrying heavy bags home. Endurance is a way of life. Her parents lived as children and teenagers through the Soviet Union, food rationing, and ungodly fear. Grit wasn't even a choice for them; it was mandatory.

I realized, there in that car, in the silence of my kid's anger and frustration toward me, that they don't really know suffering. My parents did everything in their power so that I would never ever suffer, and I did the same. I shielded and cushioned my kids from difficulties and hardship. I made every effort to protect them from ever having it rough or being in danger.

Their perception of danger, threat, and difficulty is very skewed compared to others in the world. They have not known war, starvation, or true danger. They have not been left wanting; they have always had a warm bed and good food to eat. They don't walk miles in the snow to get groceries. Of course a steep slope at dusk with some snow falling makes them feel like they're moments from death.

What if there are times ahead when my kids might know war and starvation and ungodly fear? Then what? Will they have grit? Will they have the determination to live on and survive the mountain?

I don't know what is right. I don't know if I am the worst mother ever. What do you do? Throw your kids down the mountain and tell them to suck it up; here's your chance to exercise some grit? Or maybe Dalia is right—you just don't bring your kids up an unknown mountain in the dark, where they could get hurt, and tell them to have grit.

What I do know is that most mothers (including me) do our very best to prepare our kids for the future. Every mother has made mistakes. Every mother has probably felt like the worst mother ever at one time or another. Every mother carries perceptions that are altered by her own experience and the experiences of previous generations.

Maybe parenting is a mountain all its own, and we are thrown into the snowy darkness with a choice to make: Do we approach it with desperation or with defiance? Do we run, or do we take our falls with a sense of humor and keep inching down the mountain until we make it to the end?

Share your thoughts in the comments below!


7 comments


  • Joyce Ralph

    As a Green slope skier myself, I can imagine the fear and how real. I had to go down a blue “to get to the bottom” that was well out of my ability. I cried. I had a meltdown. And I wiped out and ended up a pretzel. My coach, aka nurse Ratchet, told me I had to ski the rest of the way. After assessing my injuries, I went down on my butt to the next flat area. My knee hurt, but I knew I had to ski, so I did. I raised 2 kids who were involved in activities at their whole lives. I wouldn’t call them adventurous. I think how you are raised makes a difference. I, like you, wanted to keep them safe. There is nothing wrong with that. As far as this trip, yeah, you should have checked it out. I always look ahead at the mountain map before I go to prepare my self mentally. The kids didn’t get that. But really, your friend, ugh. He really is to blame. Who leaves at noon to ski in late afternoon? My trust meter would be on high alert around him. Thank God you made it through. You are a tight family. Hopefully someday they can look back and laugh. Will they ever ski again? After my experience in February I’m not sure. My trust meter is on high alert. I had said I’m a green skier…why take me to blue I think some people just have no boundaries or they are unhealthy. I know if I ski again, it will be Green all the way.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    HI Joyce. Yea skiing is kind of a love/hate sport! At least until you learn which takes consistency. Just like art!!


  • Rachael Bahl

    This might be a lil too deep but your touching deep topics…when you question human suffering and the topic of good and evil, bad and good. My final thought is this: that it’s much harder to live for Christ than to die for Him. You have taught your children how to live for Him. How to be artists. This is the ultimate success, therefore you are an amazing mom. You have followed Gods plan for your life. Not everyone does…obedience is better than sacrifice!
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Yes! it takes grit and perseverance to follow God but of course there is also grace to make the endurance possible. I imagine if things were to turn bad and unbearable only God can get us through, no matter who you are.


  • Tracy

    Well okay, I love this story. I come from a part of the North where it’s not 2 feet of snow, it can be 2 storeys, and I have to say, I understand both Kate’s and the girl’s reactions. For example, I think 100% that Dimitra and Dahlia did the right thing at the cabin. It’s a simple thing to say ’They’re fathers / it’s safe’. That doesn’t make grown men safe, something Elli reflected back at them, right away. So, despite the fear and panic, they came to a firm and good decision there, pushing to get back on the lift and down the mountain as agreed. I also understand the fear they’d have felt even before they got to that cabin too. Fear is the body’s warning system for a reason. The problem is, it can be hard to think when you’re pumped full of adrenaline, and it takes experience to do that. Handling hardship is like any skill. Or like a muscle.

    Storms are terrifying things. At home, in winter, the winds would rattle the house — nudge it. I would go to sleep through these buffets like a baby in a cradle. It was normal even though I knew it was deadly. But without that experience, a house that bounces in the wind could leave people kind of terrified. That mountain would have scared the hell out of me, and I would have respected it. But there comes a point where there’s no way out but through and that’s why I get where Kate was coming from — where you were coming from, Elli. After all, you had a tonne of fear hit you out of nowhere on that mountain, then your kids were who knew where, you were lost on a mountain in the dark, and you were the only thing keeping your friend safe and together. I hate the phrase ‘Fake it till you make it’, but you gutted it out and did exactly that, winding up safely at the bottom. Under pressure, you took control in a fearsome situation to get everyone through — that is prime good Mom territory just based upon my Irish mother’s behaviour. So, I definitely know where you and Kate were coming from too. The worst situations are not helped by freaking out. But it takes experience to set feelings aside in favour of survival. Experience you had.

    Today, I put becoming a writer, moving to another country, going to art school, and other accomplishments down to grit. And even if it made the girls angry, I feel like it is missing the point to simply say ‘We might have died on that mountain’, unless you add onto the end of that statement ‘But we *didn’t*’. Fear takes the shortest route through the brain because it sounds the alarm for the entire body, but the story doesn’t end with fear. Or it shouldn’t. That’s like writing a story where the theme is ‘Man against’ instead of ‘Man against nature’ (which you all NAILED — face it, that was epic)! I feel like no one wants to hear it, but overcoming that situation had so much to do with grit. It helped you trust Dimitra and Dahlia could handle getting on the ski lift. It got your girls down the mountain. Thing is, you weren’t only more experienced at skiing than the girls were back then, you were more experienced at being.

    Final shout-out. I’ve never said such a thing to my mum. She had no protection from the storms in her life through her entire childhood and youth, and I could tell that even as a child. It is the instinct of such a mom to make sure her kids never, ever face the kind of hardships she did. No one is perfect, but I was so grateful for her. I imagine your daughters will regret having said such a thing, even though I know they didn’t mean it in their hearts. Honestly? God knows what I would give for ten more minutes with my mum even on the worst day of her parenting life. Mom also felt if you don’t let your kids face adventure IRL, they’d make one up. Adversity, I think, is the same. I like how mum did it. She let me face reality, but helped me walk through it like the bad@$$ she was. So, think about it. You got thrown into a bad situation out of nowhere. Was it really bad mothering to be flexible and help everyone through it? My opinion is - they’re gonna be so grateful for you. :)

    ——-
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    HI tracy. Thank you for your thoughtful insight! This is good stuff. Your mom sounds tough, resilient, but wonderful!


  • Sandy

    Great story! We’ve all lost our Mother of the Year awards at one time or another. Seems like your kids are turning out just fine. Thanks for sharing.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Lol! that’s funny! love that.


  • Andrea

    God knows each of our kids and gave them the homes, circumstances and personalities to endure the storms we will all have. Yes my kids won’t have the same upbringing and struggles I did but it will be relative to them, not worse, or less just different and all a part of what God would work into them for godly character and growth! Thank God He knows each of us personally and wants to use our gifts, grit, and gentleness for His glory 🥰
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    yes. its true suffering and bearing through adversity is relative. Good point!


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