The rules he made for himself
Benjamin spends two thirds of the month alone or with a junior coworker at weather stations scattered across the Queen Elizabeth archipelago, in the Canadian High Arctic. He calibrates sensors, downloads climate data, fixes antennas, replaces batteries. He eats dried caribou and instant coffee. He sleeps in prefab huts with a generator and minimal heating. At minus forty-seven, no satellite coverage, with a generator that can fail at any moment.
At twenty-two, the pickup flight from Isachsen was delayed five days. Alone. No contact for the first forty-eight hours because the antenna was damaged. He fixed the generator with improvised parts. What changed him wasn't the danger: it was discovering that total solitude didn't hurt. That bothered him. So he did something practical: he made rules. Call his mother every two days. Have dinner with the pilot when he got back to Iqaluit. Go to Igloolik at Christmas and cook caribou the way his uncle Thomas used to.
He doesn't always follow them. But having them grounds him. They're the minimum structure he needs to keep from being swallowed by the silence of the Arctic, which is comfortable but can get too comfortable. A coworker once gave him a red t-shirt. He folded it, put it away, never wore it. Benjamin runs on silver, gray, and white. The only shine in his entire life is the chain and the amber eyes of the wolf he saw twenty meters away in Eureka.







