Everything on ‘Naked and Afraid’ Is Real鈥攁nd I Lived It
When the Discovery Channel invited me to audition for its popular survival-challenge reality show, I knew it was going to be rough. What followed was one of the most intense experiences of my life.
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Here are the rules to Discovery鈥檚 long-running reality show, : Two people, a man and a woman, are naked. They鈥檙e deposited into wilderness with just a few tools, often a knife, a fire starter, and a pot. They face predators, parasites, sunburn, cold, hunger, and each other. Their goal is to survive for three weeks, but there鈥檚 no prize for completing the challenge, and anyone can tap听out at any time. The finished episodes, with their blurred genitals and Edenic concept, are strangely wholesome, family-friendly. It鈥檚 a sufferfest for glory, a chance to face nature and win.
In April 2018, my husband and I were invited to apply for the show. Apparently, years ago, I had nominated us for a now defunct couples鈥 survival program鈥攚hich I don鈥檛 remember, though it鈥檚 something I would do鈥攁nd the application made its way to a casting agent. We thought the wilderness challenge seemed like fun. What was the harm in trying out?
We sent in some videos, traveled to Los Angeles for interviews, took extensive multiple-choice personality tests, and tried our best to seem charming and听competent. After we flew home to Wisconsin, Discovery called to say we鈥檇 gotten the gig鈥攂ut that we鈥檇 be separated and sent to different locations. We just had to wait for our placements. From then on, it was all we thought about for months.
I thought I鈥檇 do pretty well at the challenge. At 30, I had worked in the outdoors professionally for more than a decade. I鈥檇 guided and thru-hiked and crossed the Arctic by dogsled, and I鈥檇 read a lot of survival stories. In books, it seemed like survivors either shaped the wilderness鈥攎ade it like home鈥攐r went feral, becoming part of it themselves, and I had a pretty good idea how my experience would play out. I鈥檇 set up a cozy lean-to on a tropical beach, tip rocks for hermit crabs (four calories each), and weave rugs and baskets by firelight after dusk. I鈥檇 recognize my partner as my greatest survival asset, even if he wasn鈥檛 someone I鈥檇 pick. I even had my sound bites ready. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see this as a test of toughness,鈥 I鈥檇 say, squinting at the setting sun. 鈥淚 see it as a test of creativity.鈥 Boom. Cut to commercial.
That summer, as we got ready, it all felt like a game. Every morning听for an hour, I practiced starting fires with a bow drill. I sprayed a stinky liquid called Tuf-Foot on the soles of my feet. I built deadfall traps from logs and made snares with yarn, catching my husband in doorways throughout the house. I quizzed him: Which birds can you eat? Which reptiles? When I walked in the woods, I saw each plant in a new light: the stalks that could structure a thatch听roof, the fibrous stems that could twist into rope. I drank milkshakes to gain weight and studied how to tap rubber.
I got vaccinations for typhoid fever and Japanese encephalitis. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to be on Naked and Afraid,鈥 I told my doctor.
鈥淲hat is wrong with you?鈥 he said. Then he called in his nurses to tell them the news.
鈥淐ould you do it in the forest here?鈥 one of the nurses asked. 鈥淭he bugs would kill you.鈥
鈥淥r the meth dealers,鈥 said the other nurse.
My mom said she wasn鈥檛 worried. My dad forwarded me articles about how it鈥檚 dangerous to eat slugs.
I even made a plan for moments during the challenge that I didn鈥檛 want filmed: I would sing songs with expensive licensing fees so that Discovery couldn鈥檛 use the footage. The Beatles were famously pricey, right? If I got diarrhea, I鈥檇 sing 鈥淗ey Jude鈥 at the top of my lungs.