In a tale that has sent ripples of awe through the mountaineering community and a shudder of guilt through every gym-going, protein-shake-swigging Londoner, a Nepalese guide has survived six days stranded on Everest by subsisting on a diet of chocolate and ice. Yes, dear reader, you heard correctly. While the rest of us panic if the fridge runs out of oat milk for a single morning, this man spent nearly a week at 27,000 feet with nothing but a Wonka-esque emergency ration and the cold, hard stare of the mountain itself.
The British climbers who encountered him on their descent have reportedly saluted his 'mountaineering spirit'. But let's call a spade a bloody shovel. This isn't mountaineering spirit. This is the culmination of a lifetime of preparation, a deep knowledge of the mountain, and a frankly terrifying tolerance for sugar crashes. I imagine his survival strategy was less 'indomitable will' and more 'stubborn refusal to die because the Wi-Fi bill is due'.
The headline writers are having a field day. 'Chocolate and Ice: The New Superfood'. 'Candy Man of Everest'. But let's not romanticise the situation. This guide was probably hoarding those chocolates for a rainy day, never expecting to be trapped in a literal storm. And now, every office worker who has ever snacked on a KitKat is claiming kinship. 'Yes, I too could survive on chocolate', they say, reaching for a second bar. 'It's in my blood'.
But here's the truth: you and I would be dead within 24 hours. We would have eaten the chocolate in the first hour, licked the wrapper, and then panicked. By hour three, we would be hallucinating Deliveroo drivers. This guide, however, possessed the sort of mental fortitude that comes from a lifetime of watching entitled Westerners attempt to conquer a mountain they have no business being on. He knew the mountain. He knew his body. And he knew that chocolate, in a pinch, is a compact, energy-dense, and emotionally soothing survival tool. Plus, it doesn't go off. The man is a genius.
British climbers, of course, have seized the moment to celebrate their own gallantry. 'We saluted him', they said, nobly. Did they carry him down? No. Did they share their own supplies? The report is unclear. But they did salute. That's the British way. A stiff upper lip and a good, firm salute in the face of someone else's hardship. We salute nurses. We salute postmen. And now we salute guides who ate chocolate for a week. Jolly good show.
The whole affair reeks of the glorious absurdity of extreme climbing. We spend millions on gear, hire oxygen-thin air Sherpas, and then applaud when someone survives because they had a Mars bar and a ice axe. The truth is, the mountain doesn't care about your spirit, your salutes, or your Instagram posts. It cares about your endurance, your luck, and your chocolate stash. And the only lesson from this is that when you climb Everest, pack a Cadbury's selection box. Not for sharing. For surviving.
So raise a glass of hot chocolate to the guide, whose six-day siege will go down in history alongside Scott of the Antarctic and that bloke who survived on a desert island by eating seagulls. But also raise an eyebrow at the sheer, beautiful madness of it all. We put ourselves in life-threatening situations, then celebrate the outcome as if it were a triumph of will over nature, when really it was a triumph of sugar over death. And that's a triumph we can all get behind. Just not at 27,000 feet.







