I was thrilled. This was my first summit. About 20 minutes later, the rest of the group reached. Everyone was also happy, a sense of achievement, clicking pictures and calling their families. This is the only place in the entire trek where you can get a mobile network.
After eating a light lunch of sabji and roti, it was time to leave. It was about 1.40 pm, and the sun was blazing hotter than when we started. During our descent, I started getting a slight headache. I reached out for my bottle but remembered that I was out of water. I drank some and shared some with others. After sliding down some snow slopes, my headache increased, and I felt heavy fatigue. I felt parched.
Sanjay dug out some fresh snow which I rolled into a ball and sucked the water from. It gave me some relief. We reached a small dhaba along our trail, where I bought a bottle of water. I gulped it down.
A few minutes later, we reached the two dhabas at the base of the summit. Here, my fatigue and headache increased. I had some Oral Rehydration Solution and an omelette. My condition became worse. When it was time to leave, I was unable to catch up with the group. I felt nauseous. Sanjay stayed back with me as I walked slowly. I asked him if I should be taking any medication.
“Don’t take anything. You will be fine when you reach the camp (a.k.a. losing some altitude). Have plenty of water and food. You will recover,” he said.
I later moved out of the trail and vomited my lunch behind a tree. I was exhausted. I wanted to lie on the snow and sleep.
“Keep moving. Let’s go. We have a long way ahead,” he said.
It was not a good idea to rest there. It was about 4 pm, and around the next two hours, it would be dark. So I kept walking, two steps and then a break, and doing the same thing again and again. I only looked down at the ground, as I didn't want to see how much further we still had to go. I thought of home and my wife and how she would sometimes stand close to me, her hand around my shoulder, caressing my hair.
Sanjay's words brought me back. "Don't worry. Everyone has been hit badly today. It has been a very long trek. You didn't have enough water, and your body is lacking the nutrition it needs," Sanjay explained after I complained of why this happened to me.
Later, with the descent, the altitude reduced, and I started feeling much better. When we were near Juda-ka-Talab, I caught up with some other lagging members of my group. I felt relieved when I reached the campsite with my group.
"It is finally over”, I said to myself, while also glad that I completed what I came here for.