Matthew Childs' 9 life lessons from rock climbing

82,458 views ・ 2009-04-17

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
It's pretty simple. There are nine, sort of, rules
0
12160
3000
00:15
that I discovered after 35 years of rock climbing.
1
15160
4000
00:19
Most of them are pretty basic.
2
19160
4000
00:23
Number one: don't let go --
3
23160
3000
00:26
very sure success method.
4
26160
2000
00:28
But really, truly -- often you think about
5
28160
3000
00:31
letting go way before your body does.
6
31160
2000
00:33
So hang in there,
7
33160
2000
00:35
and you come up with some pretty peculiar solutions.
8
35160
4000
00:39
Number two: hesitation is bad.
9
39160
2000
00:41
This is a friction climb, up in Tuolumne Meadows,
10
41160
3000
00:44
in the Yosemite high country.
11
44160
2000
00:46
Friction climbing doesn't have any sort of hard positive edges.
12
46160
4000
00:50
You're climbing on little dimples and nubbins in the rock.
13
50160
4000
00:54
The most friction you have is when you first put your hand
14
54160
4000
00:58
or your foot on the rock.
15
58160
3000
01:01
And then from that point on, you're basically falling.
16
61160
4000
01:05
So momentum is good. Don't stop.
17
65160
3000
01:08
Rule number three: have a plan.
18
68160
2000
01:10
This is a climb called the Naked Edge,
19
70160
2000
01:12
in El Dorado Canyon, outside of Boulder.
20
72160
2000
01:14
This climber is on the last pitch of it.
21
74160
3000
01:17
He's actually right about where I fell.
22
77160
2000
01:19
There is about 1,000 feet of air below him.
23
79160
3000
01:22
And all the hard pitches are actually below him.
24
82160
3000
01:25
Often what happens is
25
85160
2000
01:27
you're planning so hard for like,
26
87160
2000
01:29
"How do I get through the hardest part? How do I get through the hardest part?"
27
89160
3000
01:32
And then what happens?
28
92160
2000
01:34
You get to the last pitch. It's easy.
29
94160
2000
01:36
And you're completely flamed out. Don't do it.
30
96160
3000
01:39
You have to plan ahead to get to the top.
31
99160
3000
01:42
But you also can't forget that each individual move
32
102160
3000
01:45
you have to be able to complete.
33
105160
2000
01:47
This is a climb called the Dike Route,
34
107160
2000
01:49
on Pywjack Dome, up in the Yosemite high country.
35
109160
4000
01:53
The interesting thing about this climb is it's not that hard.
36
113160
3000
01:56
But if you're the leader on it,
37
116160
2000
01:58
at the hardest move, you're looking at about 100 foot fall,
38
118160
4000
02:02
onto some low angle slabs.
39
122160
2000
02:04
So you've got to focus.
40
124160
2000
02:06
You don't want to stop in the middle like
41
126160
3000
02:09
Coleridge's Kubla Kahn.
42
129160
2000
02:11
You've got to keep going.
43
131160
2000
02:13
Rule number five: know how to rest.
44
133160
2000
02:15
It's amazing. The best climbers
45
135160
2000
02:17
are the ones that in the most extreme situations
46
137160
3000
02:20
can get their bodies into some position
47
140160
2000
02:22
where they can rest,
48
142160
2000
02:24
regroup, calm themselves, focus,
49
144160
3000
02:27
and keep going.
50
147160
4000
02:31
This is a climb in the Needles, again in California.
51
151160
2000
02:33
Fear really sucks because what it means is
52
153160
2000
02:35
you're not focusing on what you're doing.
53
155160
3000
02:38
You're focusing on the consequences of
54
158160
2000
02:40
failing at what you're doing
55
160160
3000
02:43
because any given move should require
56
163160
2000
02:45
all your concentration and thought processes
57
165160
5000
02:50
to execute it effectively.
58
170160
2000
02:52
One of the things in climbing is, most people
59
172160
3000
02:55
sort of take it straight on. And they follow the most obvious solution.
60
175160
4000
02:59
This is the Devils Tower in Wyoming,
61
179160
3000
03:02
which is a columnar basalt formation
62
182160
3000
03:05
that most of you probably know from "Close Encounters."
63
185160
3000
03:08
With this, typically crack climbers
64
188160
2000
03:10
would put their hands in and their toes in
65
190160
2000
03:12
and just start climbing.
66
192160
2000
03:14
The cracks are too small to get your toes into
67
194160
3000
03:17
so the only way to climb is using your fingertips
68
197160
3000
03:20
in the cracks,
69
200160
2000
03:22
and using opposing pressure
70
202160
2000
03:24
and forcing yourself up.
71
204160
3000
03:27
Rule number eight: strength doesn't always equal success.
72
207160
3000
03:30
In the 35 years I've been a climbing guide
73
210160
2000
03:32
and taught on indoor walls, and stuff like that,
74
212160
2000
03:34
the most important thing I've learned
75
214160
2000
03:36
was, guys will always try to do pull-ups.
76
216160
3000
03:39
Beginning guys, it's like, they thrash, they thrash,
77
219160
2000
03:41
they get 15 feet up --
78
221160
2000
03:43
and they can do about 15 pull-ups right --
79
223160
2000
03:45
And then they just flame out.
80
225160
2000
03:47
Women are much more in balance
81
227160
2000
03:49
because they don't have that idea
82
229160
3000
03:52
that they're going to be able to do 100 pull-ups.
83
232160
2000
03:54
They think about how to get the weight over their feet
84
234160
3000
03:57
because it's sort of natural -- they carry you all day long.
85
237160
3000
04:00
So balance is really critical,
86
240160
2000
04:02
and keeping your weight on your feet,
87
242160
2000
04:04
which is your strongest muscle.
88
244160
2000
04:06
And of course there is rule number nine.
89
246160
2000
04:08
I came up with rule number nine after
90
248160
2000
04:10
I actually didn't plan for a fall,
91
250160
2000
04:12
and went about 40 feet and cracked a rib.
92
252160
3000
04:15
Once you get to that point where you know it's going to happen,
93
255160
3000
04:18
you need to start thinking about how you're going to let go
94
258160
3000
04:21
because that is the critical piece
95
261160
3000
04:24
of not getting hurt --
96
264160
2000
04:26
how you're going to fall onto the rope,
97
266160
4000
04:30
or if you're climbing without a rope,
98
270160
2000
04:32
fall to a place where you can actually control the fall.
99
272160
4000
04:36
So don't hang on till the bitter end.
100
276160
3000
04:39
Thank you very much.
101
279160
2000
04:41
(Applause)
102
281160
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7