I know the placement. Sort of look like the top half of an hourglass? It takes a #8 or 9 stopper perfectly. If that was your first piece you're pretty bold for just getting back into it. There is a move or two between that and the belay.
RR
Yes that placement. I remember it as the first no stress stance and not having done the route before I wanted to conserve my strength. I know I tried nuts, but I plan to do it again and will try them again.
I hadn't found my feet (in general) yet. Each (most/some?) of the moves up to slowed me down until I found the feet, then they were fine, almost easy, and I'm pretty sure I could have down climbed if I'd wanted too. Technically my first pieces were two cams we separated from the anchor. But yeah besides them, that was my first piece. Despite the butterflies I must have been fairly confident. After that I placed several solid pieces in succession before running it out a bit to the top neglecting to place a directional for my second.
I am definitely aware that it is important to prevent a high fall factor fall after a belay which is why we set up the belay as we did.
Through a combination of responsibility, desire to climb, and unfortunate location I have unintentionally become a gym rat, but after 15 years I'm still a bit of a gumby outside.