窪蹋勛圖厙

Wilderness experts are increasingly focusing on the psychological impacts of traumatic events outdoors.
(Photo: Menno Boermans/Cavan)
Wilderness experts are increasingly focusing on the psychological impacts of traumatic events outdoors.
Wilderness experts are increasingly focusing on the psychological impacts of traumatic events outdoors. (Photo: Menno Boermans/Cavan)

Meet the Woman Teaching the Psychology of Survival


Published: 

Wilderness pros are trained to deal with physical injuries, but what about the psychological trauma that can result while on an expedition, from fear and stress, or from watching someone die in a fall, an avalanche, or whitewater? Australian psychologist and mountaineer Kate Baecher created a training program to equip guides and athletes with a tool kit to handle the worst mental distress we encounter when we're far from help.


New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Kate Baecher and her mountaineering group were being guided over a dangerous traverse in Europe a few years ago when a climber in the party ahead of them fell hundreds of feet to her death. , a Sydney-based psychologist, military veteran, and avid mountaineer with a background helping people perform in high-stress situations, kept her cool while the body was recovered. But Chris, a climber in her group, began showing signs of distress. (The climbers name and some of the details of this incident have been changed to protect his privacy.)

Stunned by what hed witnessed, Chris stopped speaking and moving, and he appeared disassociated, Baecher recalls. She and a guide had to physically pull him to his feet to get him to continue to camp, which was located at 12,000 feet. When they finally reached it, Chris began crying and couldnt stop. Panic, fear, anxiety, shock, distress: he exhibited it all. He completely broke down, says 37-year-old Baecher.

The guides werent sure what to do. But once everyone was safe, Baecher attempted to coax Chris out of his embattled state. Sitting by his side, she encouraged him to take slow, deep breaths until he stopped hiccuping for air. She suggested discussing what was on the agenda for tomorrow, which gave Chris something concrete to focus on. Baecher stayed with him until he had made a decision: he would descend in the morning and not continue to the summit.

Baecher came off the mountain a few days later, after she was turned around by whiteout conditions. She reached out to Chris, who was still struggling.

Baechers experience was one in a string of events that led to a realization: outdoor guides and athletes often dont know what to do when mental health becomes an issue in the field. Drawing on her love of adventure and her psychology background, she saw an opportunity to fill a void.

While a psychological emergency in the outdoors may seem less urgent than a physical one, the consequences can be just as devastating, Baecher says. When youre staring down a big wave, a Class V rapid, or an exposed climb, overwhelming anxiety or a panic attack can put lives at risk. On an expedition, an adventurer in the grips of mental distress may be unable to operate at full capacity, may lose focus, and could make dangerous decisions without someone along whos been trained to help.

The very nature of some outdoor expeditionsliving in tight quarters for extended periods of time under high-stress conditions, often while sleep-deprivedcan lead to mental strain. Then there are the harrowing encounters with extreme weather, natural disasters, venomous animals, or, worse, the death of an expedition member, which can be difficult to manage emotionally, especially with a long way still to go on a grueling trip. Baecher points out that the mishandling of extreme wilderness experiences can affect long-term psychological well-being, motivation to return to the outdoors, and the ability to work and to maintain healthy relationships at home.

Whether youre an amateur or a professional athlete, mental distress in the wilderness is a common experience. Everywhere I go, I see people who are having trouble coping, Baecher says. That includes tough climbers on big mountains.

Yet while guides and outdoor athletes usually learn how to treat physical injuries, theyre far less likely to be taught what to do when psychological injuries occur in places where hospitals and mental health professionals arent just a 911 call away.

A lot of the psych courses out there are very urban based, says Baecher, pictured here in Australia.
A lot of the psych courses out there are very urban based, says Baecher, pictured here in Australia. (Sam I Am Management)

Wilderness first aid and first-簫responder courses have no industry-wide guidelines when it comes to mental health, and the , which teaches psycho簫logical first aid for disaster workers and community-based crisis responders, doesnt have a course ded簫icated to mental health in a wilderness context. But some organizations have started to address the topic. In the United States, that includes the , the , and . NOLSs Wilderness Advanced First Aid and Wilderness First Responder courses discuss anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation, and PTSD, says Tod Schimel簫pfenig, curriculum director at NOLS Wilderness Medicine in Wyoming, be簫cause these are subjects that come up often. You see the guides and outdoor leaders expressing a need for more training in this area because theyre increasingly having to manage these issues, he says.

Baecher, who at five foot five is a compact, fit athlete, with summits of the Eiger and the Matterhorn, among other peaks, agrees. There are simple things that would be useful in remote environments if you dont have a psychologist there, she says. A lot of the psych courses out there are very urban based.

To help, she created techniques and 簫protocols to teach psychological first aid to people who work and play in the outdoors. Shes uniquely suited to the role. Baecher spent a decade in the Australian army as a captain and psychology officer. In 2016, while still on active duty, she earned a doctorate in psychology, exploring the impact of physical injuries on mental health. Since then she has consulted for elite athletes, corporate leaders, and the Australian special forces, with stints as a military psychologist in Afghanistan and East Timor, while spending her spare time climbing and hiking.

Baecher says that there are some similarities between wilderness expeditions and military operations, like the need to compartmentalize emotionally when exposed to challenging circumstances. Outdoor guides and athletes are also vulnerable to depression and PTSD, either immediately after a harrowing experience or down the road if they dont process those emotions. Either they break or they put Band-Aid upon Band-Aid upon Band-Aid, which can lead to long-term psychological issues and affect work, relationships, and daily life, Baecher says.

For mountaineers, spending time at alti簫tude can also strain psychological health. Multiple studies have found that the decrease in oxygen levels at altitude can increase the risk of depression, anxiety, and confusion. , done by researchers in the UK, reported hallucinations by 32 percent of climbers above 24,600 feet. And in a , seven of eight world-class mountaineers whod climbed above 27,900 feet without supplemental oxygen reported hallucinatory experiences.

Malcolm Bass had hallucinations while establishing a difficult new route on Alaskas 14,573-foot Mount Hunter in 2001. Bass, from the UK, saw the rocks change shape. He and his climbing partner, Paul Figg, hadnt slept in 30 hours. Bass remembers looking up at a ridge and seeing talons reaching toward him, as if Mount Hunter were a bird of prey and wanted to consume them. He tried to explain what he was seeing to Figg, who he had begun calling Julian, a partner from a previous climb. Because Bass was aware that hallucinations occur when stressed, exhausted, and isolated in extreme environments, he managed to shake off the confusion and find a safe place to rest, but poor choices at that time could have been life-threatening. In that kind of terrain, youre as likely to drag each other off as to save one another, Bass says. There are no anchors.

Whether youre an amateur or a professional athlete, mental distress in the wilderness is a common experience. Everywhere I go, I see people who are having trouble coping, Baecher says. That includes tough climbers on big mountains.

Grounded in the neuroscience of fear and her own expertise in the psychology of extreme environments, Baechers method features a color-coded tool for assessing a distressed individual in the wilderness, a four-category scale from green (OK to stay put) to yellow (stay put, keep calm) to orange (keep safe and calm, consider evacuation) to red (evacuate). Called the ACCE model簫for assess, communicate, calm, evaluate to evacuatethe approach includes calming techniques, some of which she used on Chris after he witnessed the climbers fall, such as deep breathing and making concrete plans.

Baecher started working out the specifics for an outdoors-focused mental health training course in April 2018, after taking a wilderness first aid class from a company called in Sydney. Survives training manager at the time, Nathan Burns, is a longtime guide and outdoor educator, a paramedic, and an old friend of Baechers. Hed added a section on psychology to the course two years earlier, after hearing from clients about how common mental health issues were in the field and how unprepared they felt to deal with them. In classes, Burns says, he asks who has ever dealt with a fractured femur. You get one in a hundred who put their hand up, he says. Next he asks who has experienced some kind of mental health event. Almost every single person puts their hand up, he says. The fact is, every medical or first aid situation has an element of mental health attached to it.

Baecher first met Burns in 2013 while volunteering for an organization called , which Burns founded to send paramedics, hospital workers, and other experts on humanitarian missions around the world. She was enjoying the Survive course and was eager to participate in the psych component. It was more than other outdoor companies in Australia were doing on mental health, Baecher says. But the psych content was based on a curriculum designed to train paramedics working on ambulance crews in urban areas, and in Baechers assessment that made it less applicable to wilderness professionals, who usually cant talk to a supervisor or call for help. Baecher, who laughs easily and says exactly what she thinks, thought there was room for improvement. I was like, Nathan, can you please let me write this? The more research I did, I couldnt find anything that was relevant for the outdoors.

To correct this, Baecher looked into published research on a variety of related topics, including mental health first aid, trauma, and risk assessment in the outdoors. She incorporated techniques shed learned in the military, wilderness first aid protocols, and the mental health continuum, a model for thinking about psychological states as a spectrum, from healthy and coping to injured or ill. Burns collaborated with her, helping develop the color scale, an action plan, and a training module for instruction, along with a memorable acronym. We brought it all together and mashed it up and drank some wine and finally finished it, she says. In August 2018, Survive First Aid began incorporating the new approach into its three- and five-day wilderness first aid courses.

NOLS students receiving wilderness first aid training
NOLS students receiving wilderness first aid training (Courtesy Justin Alexandre/NOLS)
Baecher at a Survive course
Baecher at a Survive course (Courtesy Survive First Aid)

On a sunny but cool afternoon last July, I attend one of Baechers training sessions, along with a group of Australian guides and wilderness educators, in a conference center an hour south of Sydney. Its the third day of a weeklong Survive wilderness first aid course, and the group has already practiced splinting shoulders, bandaging snake bites, and bracing broken legs. Now its time for the psych unit, which includes a video recorded by a climber in April 2015 during a devastating earthquake-簫triggered avalanche on Mount Everest that left at least 19 people dead, around 70 injured, and many climbers stranded at higher camps.

The video begins with the sound of a German climber saying The ground is shaking as he looks around Base Camp. Someone in the background chuckles nervously. Suddenly, people are running away from the mountain, and then he sees why: a massive avalanche is barreling toward him. He dives behind his tent with another climber as a tidal wave of snow engulfs them. Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, he says, again and again, until moments later the worst of it has passed. He stands up, not physically hurt. But he doesnt seem OK. His breathing is rapid. His panic is palpable.

After the video ends, a role-playing exercise begins in which the students imagine that theyre a days walk from Base Camp when the avalanche hits, and they decide to go help. Baecher observes from a 簫corner of the classroom as a course instructor named Joe Knight reads the fictional script for the exercise. When you arrive, you see three people who are physically fine but very distressed, says Knight, a 38-year-old Australian remote-area medic, freediving instructor, and former ocean-survival trainer. The German climber, referred to as Hans in the exercise, is holding one of his shoes in his hand and sobbing uncontrollably. His mates are sitting next to him, distressed, but not as distressed as Hans, Knight continues. Hans notices you immediately, looks you in the eye, and says pleadingly, Help me. Help me.

Standing in front of a whiteboard, Baecher launches into an explanation of what happens in the human brain when panic and anxiety strike. Im going to go psych nerd for a moment, she says.

When someone senses danger, Baecher says, the sympathetic nervous system kicks in, causing accelerated breathing, higher blood pressure, narrowed vision, and a cascade of other physical reactions collectively known as the fight-or-flight response. Its an evolutionary survival mechanism controlled by the limbic system, often referred to as the lizard brain because it overrides higher-order thinking and invokes primal emotions that are beyond reason.

Outdoor guides and athletes are vulnerable to depression and PTSD, either immediately after a harrowing experience or down the road if they dont process those emotions.

Your brain starts racing and saying, Somethings wrong, somethings wrong. And then you get more panicked. You start breathing faster. And this whole cycle continues, Baecher says. There are a few 簫dramatic ways of short-circuiting this negative feedback loop, she says. These include slapping the panicked person, holding them tight, and putting a hand over their mouth to slow their breathing and halt the panic-簫perpetuating cycle of oxygen deprivation that can occur while hyperventilating. None of these techniques are appropriate for a guide dealing with a client.

Instead, Baechers color-coded ACCE model offers alternatives for grounding someone in the moment and restoring calm, including one that puts everyone in the Sydney classroom into a mindfulness trance: asking a partner to name four things they can see, hear, and feel, then three more of each, then two, then one. (When I did this exercise with the class, I was jet-lagged and anxious about driving on the left side of the road, in the dark, back to my rental apartment. The technique was so effective that months later I continue to use it to help me and my kids deal with pandemic-related stress, school closings, and other life challenges.)

Baechers procedures are simple enough to fit into a pocket-size handbook, with instructions to aid in the assessment of a struggling individual or group. Her hope is that theyll help guides and adventurers get past any discomfort in dealing with psychological distress in the outdoors. A lot of people worry that theyll do something wrong and make it worse. As a result, they kind of shut down and dont have a lot of insight into why we have emotions and what goes wrong, Baecher tells the class. Theres also not been the right level of training in and around what to do.

Next, she stands by as groups of four students decide together that Hans is in the orange zonein need of support but not immediate evacuation. Finally, Baecher offers additional strategies for distraction, grounding, and calming techniques that might help Hans and others in a situation like his. You can breathe with them, she says, squatting on the gray-carpeted floor and looking around the room. In, two, three, four. Out, two, three, four. She also suggests maintaining eye contact, keeping your voice calm and your words clear, and giving frequent, easy-to-follow updates about whats happening.

By the end of the session, Knight informs the group that Hans is doing much better. The grounding exercises were effective. Now, according to the groups assessments, hes between the green and yellow zones. He is no longer in a state of emergency, and they can help him to leave the mountain.

Without mental health intervention, Hanss outcome could have looked very different: He might have suffered frostbite from having removed his shoe and not been able to hike out. He might have been too panicked to make quick, smart decisions about the rapidly changing environment.

Or he might have been at a higher risk for long-term trauma.

Baecher descending the Eiger in 2018
Baecher descending the Eiger in 2018 (Kate Baecher)
Survive instructor Nathan Burns
Survive instructor Nathan Burns (Courtesy Carrie Burns)

The day after the psych session, Baecher picks me up outside my rental in Wombarra, a coastal town near the conference center. She shows up in her silver 2003 Mazda for the two-hour drive northwest to . Baecher, who makes eye contact when she talks and listens intently, has a brain that churns, and she tends to prioritize new ideas over practical tasks, like repairing her car. The passenger-side door handle is busted; when you want to get out, you have to roll down the window and open it from the outside. She laughs every time. I seem professional until you get to know me, she jokes.

The park encompasses a dramatic gorge that drops 1,200 feet. Getting down requires descending a metal staircase that hugs the rock face before meeting up with a trail. Its a cool, blue-sky day, and at the start of the 15-mile hike, Baecher talks about growing up a sporty kid in Sydney and then runs through her eclectic r矇sum矇. With Burnss disaster-response organization Backpacker Medics, she volunteered in Nepal after earthquakes and in Bangladesh after an influx of Rohingya refugees, following mass killings in Myanmar. In addition to her work on the ACCE model, she runs a coaching business with her brother, Chris, a former air-traffic controller.

Baecher has also worked as a staff psychologist on reality-TV shows, including Shark Tank and a British program called Im a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here, in which famous people are taken into the jungle to compete Survivor-style. On Im a Celebrity, one of her tasks was to debrief participants and crew members after long, unpredictable days in hostile terrain. On one occasion, she helped an arachnophobic contestant after a terrifying encounter with spiders.

By the time shed enrolled in Burnss wilderness first aid course at Survive, Baecher had spent years working in remote, extreme environments, where she accumulated experience helping people struggling to function far outside their comfort zone.

Many guides get by on intuition and social skills to calm clients in tough situations, Baecher tells me as we hike out of the gorge. Often they get it right. But its easy to miss signs of distress or even to make matters worse, dredging up trauma while lacking the tools to help clients process it. Unlike a broken bone, which is treated pretty much the same way every time, psychological injuries are more nuanced, she says, and intuition can lead well-intentioned guides astray.

If youre unraveling people and cant put them back together, and youre like, Shit, now what?thats what really worries me. We dont want someone who isnt a psychologist to go down that pathway where theyre acting like one. The risk of that going wrong is really quite significant, Baecher says, noting again that poor decision-making can lead to injury, life-altering trauma, or death. The ACCE model gives people parameters and structure. The aim is first aid. Were going to patch you up and keep you safe. Its comfort as much as anything else, and making sure they do it right.

Baecher isnt the only one making 簫inroads into this new field. In British Columbia, clinical counselor and wilderness guide, who goes by Daye, had an aha moment similar to Baechers during a wilderness first aid refresher course in 2016. She noticed an almost total absence of mental health topics during discussion and in the course manual. It basically said that if someone makes a suicide attempt on a trip, you should evacuate them urgently, says Cooper, the 34-year-old former executive director of the Sea Kayak Guides Alliance. And its like, great, thats a good start. But how much more could we talk about?

The embrace of mental health in the outdoors is trickling down to guide culture, says Brenton Reagan, lead guide and marketing manager at Exum Guides. The openness to talk about thingsemotions, fear, troublesin large groups has grown greatly, he says.

When guiding, Cooper says, she deals on a weekly basis with someone experiencing anxiety or going through trauma in their home life that surfaces on a trip. To illustrate this, she told me a story inspired by a real event, changing some of the details to preserve confidentiality. On a wilderness outing, she found a client sitting on a log, her head down, barely responding to questions and, Cooper soon learned, thinking about suicide. The group was supposed to be getting into canoes for a long day of paddling, but the situation required a different plan. Cooper, who had completed suicide-intervention training for volunteer work on a crisis hotline, altered the itinerary to allow time for thorough conversation and assessment. With the clients consent, she and a coleader used a satellite phone to contact the persons psychiatrist, who offered insight and a medication adjustment. Based on the collaborative assessment, Cooper arranged an evacuation the next day so the client could be better supported. A friend of Coopers had died by 簫suicide earlier that year, which had raised complex emotions for her; she was grateful that she knew what to do. I was thinking, What if I hadnt done that suicide-簫intervention training? she says. It would have been so much more challenging for me.

In response to those complexities, Cooper developed , a workshop she first offered in British Columbia in 2018. Since then she has taught at least 15 courses incorporating emotional-regulation techniques and her own decision-making scale. (The workshops are now available via Zoom.) Her initial focus was on anxiety but soon expanded to include depression, trauma, and mood disorders. Shes also working on a book about mental health first aid in the wilderness.

Theres a real hunger, Cooper says, referring to interest in the kind of work and she and Baecher are doing. She often hears from students who say they wish theyd had this kind of training earlier. Theres a sense of, I cant believe this hasnt been a thing before.

Feedback has been equally overwhelming for Baechers psychology session in the Survive courses. Students come up to us after and say, Thank you so much for doing this, Nathan Burns says. Thank you for giving us a tool to use.

Daye Cooper leading her Mental Health Wilderness First Aid workshop in British Columbia
Daye Cooper leading her Mental Health Wilderness First Aid workshop in British Columbia (Jay Raichura)

The embrace of mental health in the outdoors is also trickling down to guide cul簫ture, says Brenton Reagan, lead guide and marketing manager at in Wyoming. Many years ago, he says, some certifi簫cation courses were no簫toriously tough. An in簫structor might unlock a carabiner just to see if the student noticed. They were trying to set you up so you had a really hard time, he says.

While Reagan recently took a wilderness first-responder recertification course that didnt mention mental health, he says that Exum uses a program called Brain Gyms to teach guides breathing and movement techniques for calming anxiety. He notes that he deals with anxious clients nearly every time hes in the field. The openness to talk about things簫emotions, fear, troublesin large groups has grown greatly, says Reagan, who has been guiding for 20 years.

Also, prominent adventurers are airing their struggles in public, including mountaineer Cory Richards, who has been open about the PTSD and alcoholism he endured after surviving an avalanche on the descent from Gasherbrum II in 2011. Conrad Anker, a veteran climber who has lost multiple friends in the mountains, welcomes the transformation. Close climbing companions have always been willing to talk to each other, he says, but sharing happens more than it used to, maybe because of social media, or because more people are climbing. Thirty years ago it was, yeah, climbers were tough, he says. You just went up there.

After experiencing a series of tragedies in the wilderness, climber Madaleine Sorkin partnered with the American Alpine Club to launch the , an online mental health resource for mountaineers and other athletes affected by loss related to alpinism. Mental health awareness is infusing adventure at the college level, too. At Dartmouth, for instance, student trip leaders on wilderness outings get training in mental health topics before group overnight hikes. And for solo adventurers, a new app called Drift, designed by UK scientists, helps users manage their psychological well-being while off the grid.

North Carolinabased Seth Collings Hawkins, an emergency physician, executive editor of the Wilderness Medical Societys Wilderness Medicine magazine, and editor of the textbook , says that the field of wilderness emergency medicine is experiencing a mental health revolution. He put me in touch with Laura McGladrey, a family and psychiatric nurse practitioner at the and a NOLS Wilderness Medicine Institute instructor. She helped create an organization called the , which provides resources, training, and education to mountaineers, wilderness organizations, wildland firefighters, and other groups about the long-term health risks of exposure to high-stress situations. Her work calendar is full of lectures and seminars. This is a radical rethinking of how we approach people in difficult situations in the wilderness, Hawkins says. Im pretty certain it will be one of the next big things, and completely commonplace in ten years, but right now its on the cutting edge.

For her part, Baecher is developing a full-day course addressing a wider assortment of issues, including self-harm, suicidal thoughts, and self-care techniques in wilderness settings. Shes also working on a strategy for others to teach the course. Shes well along the path to her larger goal: to help guides and educators make the right decisions when psychological distress arises in the outdoors. Given the growth in awareness, shes confident that once she builds it, the outdoor community will embrace it. The time is right, she says.