°®¶ą´«Ă˝ alumnus Brian Dickinson tells his story of surviving Mount Everest after suddenly being struck with snow blindness. This “Story of Success” is an expanded documentary of the Degrees of Success podcast.
0:07
You live and die by the decisions you make. I’m wired to push beyond my limits — never give up.
0:16
I was at the highest point in the world, alone, and blind.
0:53
When you grow up, you can’t choose your family or the situations you’re in, so you’re out of control. There’s no plan B.
1:01
When you come from a chaotic environment, you’re never going to quit.
1:06
A lot of people who go through that end up unconsciously seeking it out — getting into special operations and high-altitude mountaineering, putting themselves in those scenarios so they can finally have control.
1:24
That red zone — you’re always heightened and on. My grandpa really filled the gap of the father figure I didn’t have.
1:36
He was in the Navy during World War II, manning the guns and shooting down planes and suicide bombers.
1:44
The Navy back then was intense. One of their supply ships got sunk. They had no food and the whole ship was starving.
1:51
When he got back stateside, he went straight to a store, bought a head of lettuce, sat on the curb, and ate it.
2:05
General Douglas MacArthur had been appointed to receive the unconditional surrender of Japan.
2:13
Back then, public displays of affection weren’t common, but he sought out his childhood sweetheart — my grandma — and kissed her. My grandparents modeled a great love story.
2:24
My grandpa being there was amazing.
2:31
He taught me golf. He taught me unconditional love, which I’d never really experienced before.
2:40
He was that rock throughout my childhood.
2:50
My grandma was always around and present, but she eventually passed away from cancer.
2:56
While she was dealing with cancer, I stayed with her a lot.
3:03
That’s a lot for a kid to witness. My grandpa struggled with alcoholism, but when he was most influential in my life, he didn’t drink at all.
3:13
After my grandma passed, he fell off the wagon, and I saw a completely different side of him. It was heartbreaking.
3:21
Later, while I was in SAR school, he found out he had cancer.
3:28
I took emergency leave and came home to see him. The last thing he told me was that he was proud of me and that he knew what I was going through was tough.
3:38
He told me to be the best I could be. I carried that back with me and used it to get through the training.
3:50
Coming from a military family, I never really thought I’d join the military myself.
3:56
But I wanted to do something bigger than myself and serve.
4:03
My dad served in Vietnam as a jet mechanic.
4:10
He told me not to just enlist without purpose. At that point, I wanted to be either a pilot or a Navy SEAL.
4:17
I went into the recruiter’s office, looked at all the options, and remember seeing rescue swimmers getting picked up. I thought it looked incredible.
4:26
A SAR swimmer is a search-and-rescue swimmer — the men and women who jump from helicopters to rescue downed pilots or civilians in emergencies.
4:40
After boot camp, I went to Pensacola, Florida for aircrew school. It was brutal.
4:46
We’d wake up at 3 or 4 in the morning for intense pool training.
4:52
The whole point was to weed out the people who only thought the job sounded cool from the people who could actually do it.
5:00
You’re pushed to the brink of drowning every day, but the goal is to remain calm in chaos so you can save lives.
5:10
We were trained never to panic because we’d literally be jumping into the ocean from helicopters to rescue people.
5:20
It could be a downed pilot, refugees from a sinking boat — anything.
5:28
This is my flight jacket. It was issued in 1993.
5:34
On average, I’d lose about two aircrew swimmers I knew every year in helicopter crashes.
5:42
Our squadron once had to recover bodies from a burned helicopter crash in Southern California.
5:47
Those experiences stack up, but at the time I kept them locked away.
5:56
You compartmentalize it all. You’re constantly operating in that red zone.
6:05
You’re always heightened and alert. I didn’t unpack those experiences for many years.
6:14
Instead, I got into high-altitude mountaineering — almost unconsciously adding more trauma on top of trauma.
6:33
After my first deployment to the Persian Gulf, I came home and met my wife, Joanna.
6:42
We dated for six years before getting married. During that time, I deployed again, which was really hard on us.
6:52
We got married in 2001. Joanna was accepted into the University of Washington for a master’s degree in social work.
7:01
I was taking classes too and preparing to leave the military. I wanted my degree.
7:07
I earned a bachelor’s degree in information technology.
7:13
Then I decided I wanted a master’s degree too. No one in my family had ever earned one.
7:17
I researched programs and found the °®¶ą´«Ă˝â€™s online MBA program, specializing in technology management.
7:27
One thing I appreciated was that many of the instructors were actively working in the industries they taught.
7:36
You could tell the difference — they had real-world experience.
7:45
I had a really positive experience at the °®¶ą´«Ă˝.
7:51
After graduating, I eventually became an instructor there.
7:57
I taught business ethics for five years.
8:03
Those classroom discussions with students from different backgrounds and generations were incredibly fulfilling.
8:13
I learned just as much from them as they learned from me.
8:22
A few months before climbing Everest, °®¶ą´«Ă˝ did a photo shoot and article about me called Seven Summits, One Goal.
8:31
I ended up on the cover of Phoenix Focus Magazine.
8:41
At that point, I was working in tech, had my MBA, and Joanna and I had children.
8:50
One day I was jumping out of helicopters, and the next I was living this very responsible life.
9:00
But I realized there was an adventure gap in my life.
9:10
Living in the Pacific Northwest, surrounded by mountains, I started climbing.
9:19
I climbed Mount Rainier, took mountaineering courses, and eventually decided to climb the highest peak on each continent.
9:31
My wife’s immediate response was, “Does that include Everest?”
9:39
I said yes — Everest is one of the seven summits.
9:49
You don’t just show up and climb Everest. There are over 300 bodies on the mountain, and every one tells a different story.
10:00
Training becomes a lifestyle.
10:07
I’d wake up at 3 or 4 a.m., load 60 or 70 pounds into a pack, and climb mountains around the Pacific Northwest.
10:17
Those hikes were often eight miles round trip.
10:22
That’s the physical side. There’s also the emotional discipline and mental preparation.
10:32
There’s so much involved in even attempting Everest.
10:43
Once I commit to a goal, I’m all in.
10:55
Mount Everest stands 29,035 feet high.
11:07
Above a certain altitude, humans can’t survive long-term, which is why the climb takes two months — you have to acclimate.
11:16
It’s 38 miles just to reach base camp at 17,500 feet.
11:24
From there, things become much more serious.
11:32
The first major obstacle is the Khumbu Icefall — constantly shifting, building-sized blocks of ice.
11:41
This is where climbers cross bottomless crevasses on ladders tied together with rope.
11:50
I had to pass through the Khumbu Icefall about eight times just to acclimate.
12:00
You climb up to Camp One, come back down, rest for days, and repeat the process.
12:10
Climbing these mountains requires enormous patience.
12:17
I climbed with a Sherpa friend named Pasang, who already had several Everest summits.
12:24
He was incredibly strong and experienced, though we were often separated during the climb.
12:34
After the Khumbu Icefall comes Camp One at 19,000 feet and then the Western Cwm.
12:45
Beyond that lies Advanced Base Camp at 21,000 feet.
12:51
That’s where the true climbing begins.
12:56
You ascend the Lhotse Face — a steep wall of ice, snow, and rock.
13:04
Lhotse is the fourth-highest mountain in the world, and climbers pass over it to reach the South Col, the highest camp on Earth.
13:12
You’re always clipped into ropes.
13:14
If you fall while attached, you stop at the next anchor. If you fall unclipped, it’s over.
13:25
On summit day, winds reached 70 miles per hour.
13:35
A famous Japanese climber died that same night near the South Summit.
13:42
About 1,000 feet above Camp Three, I stopped and removed my goggles and oxygen mask.
13:50
My foot slipped, and as I grabbed the rope, my goggles slid off my arm and fell.
14:06
I thought it was over because eye protection is essential.
14:15
Fortunately, some Sherpas had stopped the goggles from falling further.
14:24
When I retrieved them, they were cracked. I removed the internal lens without realizing it reduced their protection dramatically.
14:30
I continued climbing and reached high camp later that afternoon.
14:43
That night, Pasang and I prepared for the summit push.
14:53
About an hour separated us during the climb, which worried me.
15:01
At 27,500 feet, I was the highest person on Earth in that moment.
15:10
Pasang eventually caught up, but he became sick and vomited after drinking water.
15:18
I suggested we turn around.
15:27
But he insisted he was okay, and I trusted his experience.
15:38
At around 28,000 feet, he finally turned back and told me to continue alone.
15:47
I evaluated the situation carefully.
15:54
I felt strong. The weather was stable.
16:03
So I continued upward alone through the death zone.
16:14
At one point, I saw Everest’s perfect pyramid shadow cast across the Himalayas at sunrise.
16:25
It was one of the most extraordinary things I’ve ever witnessed.
16:41
Eventually I reached the South Summit and then the Hillary Step — a narrow, exposed rock climb with massive drops on both sides.
16:58
I moved slowly and carefully.
17:09
Finally, I could see the true summit.
17:24
I stepped onto the summit and took it all in.
17:37
I radioed down: “This is Brian checking in from the summit of Everest.”
17:54
A friend radioed back, congratulated me, and reminded us to be careful descending.
18:02
That’s when everyone realized I was completely alone.
18:11
They estimated it would take me two to three hours to descend. No one heard from me for seven.
18:32
You spend years preparing to stand on top of the world, but you can only remain there briefly.
18:52
I started heading down.
19:07
Within minutes, everything turned white. I had gone snow blind.
19:16
The sunlight reflecting off the ice burned my corneas.
19:23
I dropped to my knees, holding onto the rope.
19:33
I was alone, blind, at the highest point on Earth.
19:42
But I got up and kept moving.
19:54
Whenever the wind gusted, I lowered myself and waited it out before taking another step.
20:14
At the Hillary Step, I began rappelling down and slipped, slamming into the mountain.
20:27
Later, I slipped again near the South Summit and fell violently against the rope.
20:35
The rope burned through my gloves, ripped my oxygen mask off, and nearly tore my oxygen bottle from my pack.
20:54
I finally stabilized myself and slowed my breathing.
21:01
It was the most terrifying experience of my life.
21:08
Eventually I reached the point where Pasang had left extra oxygen.
21:17
For some reason, I grabbed the spare bottle.
21:28
Moments later, my own oxygen ran out.
21:38
After 33 hours of climbing blind, I collapsed to my knees and prayed.
21:49
Then I tried the backup oxygen bottle and got airflow.
21:59
It felt like fire rushing back into my veins.
22:03
I continued rappelling down until I reached the South Col.
22:15
Out of nowhere, Pasang hugged me and said, “Brian, you’re alive.”
22:24
I passed out for 15 hours. My eyes were sealed shut, and I had lost 20 pounds in a single day.
22:35
Eventually we descended to Camp Two, where I called Joanna on a satellite phone.
22:45
I told her I had soloed the summit and gone blind.
22:55 (Joanna speaking)
I got the call: “I’m blind. I summited.” Then the line went dead.
23:00
I didn’t know if he’d be blind forever or never see our children again.
23:12
Thankfully, he called again 24 hours later.
23:23
When he finally reached base camp, we cried together over the phone.
23:32
I’m grateful I survived.
23:44
Between military service, helicopter rescues, mountaineering, and trauma, I’ve put my body and mind through a lot.
23:55
I’m not trying to top what I’ve already done.
23:59
I feel incredibly blessed to still be here and in a healthier place now.
24:07
I’ve written books and given keynote talks.
24:19
There’s a lot of humility in standing on stage and realizing people connect deeply with your story.
24:29
At the end of the day, I’m just Brian — someone who went through an extraordinary experience and is grateful to share it.
Brian Dickinson joined the U.S. Navy out of high school and went on to become an aviation rescue swimmer in Special Operations for six years. A 2003 MBA graduate of °®¶ą´«Ă˝, he was honored as a UOPX Alumni Luminary in 2025. Dickinson is currently an author, podcast host and keynote speaker.
The Degrees of Success podcast by °®¶ą´«Ă˝ brings you inspiring stories of UOPX alumni who have transformed their careers through education. Each episode highlights personal journeys of overcoming obstacles, achieving professional milestones and using education to unlock new opportunities. Whether you’re looking for motivation, career advice or guidance on how education can propel you forward, these alumni stories offer invaluable insights to help you succeed.