Matthew Childs' 9 life lessons from rock climbing

81,474 views ・ 2009-04-17

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00:12
It's pretty simple. There are nine, sort of, rules
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that I discovered after 35 years of rock climbing.
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Most of them are pretty basic.
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Number one: don't let go --
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very sure success method.
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But really, truly -- often you think about
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letting go way before your body does.
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So hang in there,
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and you come up with some pretty peculiar solutions.
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Number two: hesitation is bad.
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This is a friction climb, up in Tuolumne Meadows,
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in the Yosemite high country.
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Friction climbing doesn't have any sort of hard positive edges.
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You're climbing on little dimples and nubbins in the rock.
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The most friction you have is when you first put your hand
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or your foot on the rock.
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And then from that point on, you're basically falling.
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So momentum is good. Don't stop.
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Rule number three: have a plan.
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This is a climb called the Naked Edge,
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in El Dorado Canyon, outside of Boulder.
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This climber is on the last pitch of it.
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He's actually right about where I fell.
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There is about 1,000 feet of air below him.
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And all the hard pitches are actually below him.
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Often what happens is
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you're planning so hard for like,
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"How do I get through the hardest part? How do I get through the hardest part?"
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And then what happens?
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You get to the last pitch. It's easy.
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And you're completely flamed out. Don't do it.
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You have to plan ahead to get to the top.
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But you also can't forget that each individual move
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you have to be able to complete.
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This is a climb called the Dike Route,
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on Pywjack Dome, up in the Yosemite high country.
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The interesting thing about this climb is it's not that hard.
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But if you're the leader on it,
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at the hardest move, you're looking at about 100 foot fall,
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onto some low angle slabs.
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So you've got to focus.
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You don't want to stop in the middle like
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Coleridge's Kubla Kahn.
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You've got to keep going.
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Rule number five: know how to rest.
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It's amazing. The best climbers
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are the ones that in the most extreme situations
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can get their bodies into some position
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where they can rest,
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regroup, calm themselves, focus,
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and keep going.
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This is a climb in the Needles, again in California.
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Fear really sucks because what it means is
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you're not focusing on what you're doing.
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You're focusing on the consequences of
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failing at what you're doing
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because any given move should require
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all your concentration and thought processes
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to execute it effectively.
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One of the things in climbing is, most people
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sort of take it straight on. And they follow the most obvious solution.
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This is the Devils Tower in Wyoming,
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which is a columnar basalt formation
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that most of you probably know from "Close Encounters."
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With this, typically crack climbers
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would put their hands in and their toes in
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and just start climbing.
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The cracks are too small to get your toes into
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so the only way to climb is using your fingertips
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in the cracks,
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and using opposing pressure
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and forcing yourself up.
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Rule number eight: strength doesn't always equal success.
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In the 35 years I've been a climbing guide
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and taught on indoor walls, and stuff like that,
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the most important thing I've learned
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was, guys will always try to do pull-ups.
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Beginning guys, it's like, they thrash, they thrash,
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they get 15 feet up --
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and they can do about 15 pull-ups right --
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And then they just flame out.
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Women are much more in balance
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because they don't have that idea
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that they're going to be able to do 100 pull-ups.
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They think about how to get the weight over their feet
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because it's sort of natural -- they carry you all day long.
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So balance is really critical,
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and keeping your weight on your feet,
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which is your strongest muscle.
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And of course there is rule number nine.
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I came up with rule number nine after
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I actually didn't plan for a fall,
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and went about 40 feet and cracked a rib.
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Once you get to that point where you know it's going to happen,
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you need to start thinking about how you're going to let go
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because that is the critical piece
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of not getting hurt --
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how you're going to fall onto the rope,
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or if you're climbing without a rope,
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fall to a place where you can actually control the fall.
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So don't hang on till the bitter end.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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