Alex Honnold
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
If you loved rock climbing as much as I love rock climbing, no matter what your genetic disposition towards neuroticism and all that stuff, you would just kind of work through all that stuff and you'd find your own path to getting good at climbing, basically.
I wouldn't give them advice.
I'd be like, you do you.
You find the thing you love to do, go hard.
Basically, learn some skills, get good at something.
What do you like to do?
I mean, that's kind of the thing for me, especially with climbing, is, like, if someone had told me, like, you're going to train climbing for the rest of your life, I'd be like, oh, that sounds like kind of a grind.
Because, I mean, it is hard work.
You're, like, hiking uphill with a heavy backpack, and it's cold, and it's windy.
It's, like, it's basically physically uncomfortable.
I mean, being a professional rock climber means that you're physically uncomfortable.
All the time, like often, you know, like it's, you know, it's hard.
But if you're doing it because you freaking love doing it, it doesn't feel very hard.
And so, I mean, I think the key for a kid is find the thing that doesn't feel like hard work.
I mean, yeah, I had like a healthy intimidation.
I mean, like my first season in Yosemite, the first time seeing El Cap as a climber, I was 19, and it looks impossible.
It looks completely insane.
I was like, that's so big.
But then, you know, within a couple seasons, you know, I climbed some bigger walls, learned how to climb, and then...
A friend and I had the sort of season goal, like we were going to climb Yosemite all season with the aspiration at the end to climb El Cap in a day.