Three Things You Should Do On Every Climb
A few years ago, while on a trip to the climbing paradise of Kalymnos, Greece, I was loaned a copy of Arno Ilgner’s The Rock Warrior’s Way. It immediately made an impression because, unlike other training manuals I had read with their “do finger pull-ups until you weep” advice, Arno’s book dealt with the mental aspect of climbing.
In my opinion The Rock Warrior’s Way (Desiderata Institute, 2003) is a must read for any rock climber, if for nothing else than the practical tips it provides. Three things I learned from the book that I now do on every climb are listed below. Hopefully they’ll help you with your climbing too.
#1. Smile before every climb. Whether it’s a warm-up jaunt on a 5.7 slab or a 5.12 offwidth project, take a moment before beginning any route to smile. The idea is to get into a headspace that is relaxed but conscious. Sure that 15-foot roof looks daunting but if you pause to smile, you’ll remember just how much you love this sport. Alternatively, that 5.5 you’re putting up for your punter friend might seem boring but if you smile beforehand, guaranteed you’ll enjoy it more. Oh, and you look better when you smile. (And climbing’s all about how good you look anyway.)
#2. Exhale. You hear belayers shouting to their trembling rope guns all the time: “Keep breathing man!” What you don’t hear is specific advice about how to breathe. So here it is: Breathing is a two-way process and in order to benefit from a great intake of fresh oxygen, you must expel all the air in your lungs first. If you’re nervous on a route, or you’re about to tackle that crux section, exhale all the breath out of your lungs – blow out through your mouth and then use your diaphragm to push out the last puffs of air. After that you’ll be forced to fully inflate your lungs and all that sweet oxygen will help calm you and feed your gunned forearms. Remember: when your belayer yells “breathe” what he’s really saying is “exhale everything man!”
#3. Name it. Don’t judge it. As climbers we do this all the time when offering beta: “So you crimp off that nasty edge and then throw for the heinous sloper before reaching the ‘thank Jesus’ hold.” Wonderfully descriptive? Yes. Technically accurate? Not in the slightest. What we focus on in statements such as that one are the judgments – “nasty,” “heinous” and “thank Jesus” holds. Try this instead: the next time you’re scoping a route, offering beta or contemplating the next 10 feet of a climb, name the holds for what they are: “Reach for the three-finger crimp with your left hand, bump your right to the palm-sized sloper and then deadpoint for the large ledge.” By sticking to the technical descriptions of what you observe, you’re no longer obstructed by judgment. Instead you’re concentrating on exactly which areas of your hands and feet are going to be making contact with the rock at certain times. (Or, in the case of the route “Max Headroom” in Skaha, what part of your head is going to be shoved into the rock at what times.)


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This is a great post Vince. Thanks! I was climbing today in the Smoke Bluffs and had 2 different chances to put these 3 steps into practice. Number 1, smiling, was easy, I’m in Squamish after all. And number 2, breathing, got me through a few dicey moments (I notice it especially after a hairy sequence, a deep exhale calms my mind and helps me reset for what comes next). I still struggle with Number 3, however. I do sometimes call a ‘bad sloper’ or ‘heinous crimp’, or more often, ‘no feet’, but other times I’m just not sure what to name. Today, for example, I had trouble figuring out whether a hold was a shallow side-pull requiring high feet, or a right-hand crimp requiring a vertical smear. I got stuck in a loop, saying ‘I don’t know what you are’. In the end, I hesitated, made a half-ass move, and fell, pulling a purple C3 on the way down (damn you tiny cam!) . I’ve decided that number 4 should be ‘commit fully to a choice once you have made it’, and maybe number 5 would be ‘learn how to climb better’.
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Thanks Vince – great tips! One thing you missed was the “Cursty” (reference Mel’s post). Hmm, I guess technically you wouldn’t curtsy “on” the climb. I really appreciate the Exhale tip. When we were in Skaha the other week, Lynda made a comment that really stuck with me. After she worked her way through mentai crux (which was accompanied with the most awesome shriek-yell) she said “man, this breathing stuff really works”. For real.