Three tales of surviving entrapment with sanity intact

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Randy Knapp was a teenager when he spent 13 nights trapped in a whiteout on Oregon's Mount Hood. Thirty-three years later, he's still climbing.
Buy Northwest Herald Photos »

Randy Knapp was a teenager when he spent 13 nights trapped in a whiteout on Oregon’s Mount Hood. Thirty-three years later, he’s still climbing.

Jonathan Metz tried to saw off his arm this summer after it got stuck in his furnace and infection set in. Crouched alone for three days in his Connecticut basement, he’s about to return to his job as a finance manager for an insurance company.

Their stories of survival reveal a heartening truth for the 33 men trapped deep in a Chilean mine: While nobody walks away from catastrophe completely unscathed, neither do most survivors succumb in the aftermath to paralyzing despair, said George Bonanno, a psychology professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College.

Bonanno, who specializes in resilience during times of trauma, and fellow researchers will publish a review of literature on the topic this fall in a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. They found a low rate of extreme problems, including post-traumatic stress disorder, in a majority of people coping after disaster.

“We concluded that the ceiling for harmful effects is about 30 percent of those exposed,” he said. “Most everyone else either recovers quickly or shows great resilience. Some people will be deeply psychologically wounded, but most people will not.”

Certainly, recovery can take time. A lawsuit nearly wrecked Nicholas White’s life after he spent 41 hours in a New York City elevator in 1999. He’s working again after long stretches of unemployment.

Though their circumstances were quite different, the hearts of Knapp, Metz and White go out to the miners in Chile. One promised in a letter sent up through a narrow bore-hole that he’ll give up mining if he makes it out alive. “Everything is going to change,” he wrote.

Change is inevitable, but life need not be heavy with pain, fear or sorrow. Knapp, Metz and White know that in their own ways.


Randy Knapp

Knapp was 18 in 1975, living in the eastern Washington town of Walla Walla, when he and two 16-year-old friends decided on a New Year’s Eve summit climb of Mount Hood, a trip two of them had made before.

Previous Page|1|||||

Reader Poll

Does anyone in your extended family have twins or multiples?

Yes
No