Back in my younger days the this was basically my mantra. I was constantly lounging around at the crag resting up to get on whatever route project I was working on. Unfortunately, I was only good for one, maybe two goes on the project and I was done for the day (As I have outlined before, I am not very good at completing projects). Throw in 2 or 3 warm-up pitches and this doesn’t add up to a great deal of productivity. Here was my typical weekend:
- Obsess over one route the whole drive down on Friday
- Warm-up Saturday psyched for project
- Try project – send almost never
- Decide to “rest” the remainder of the day in case the project will go down on Sunday
- Wake-up Sunday feeling worn down because I climbed outdoors the day before
- Decide to wait on the project until I feel better on a future trip (likely weeks or months away) and only climb a few easier routes
- Leave between noon and 2 on Sunday to actually get home at a decent hour
- Repeat exact same pattern next trip
Pathetic right? I attribute this to a couple of factors, one of which is an admittedly lazy attitude on my part. The other factor is that I didn’t climb outside frequently enough, so when I finally did get outside I put a lot of emphasis on results. In my mind at the time, results equated with trying to push myself to the limit.
Now I am older, more experienced, more prone to injury and more apt to simply be happy climbing at all. I also spend 40+ hours a week chained to a desk. So when I see younger climbers I know repeating the same pattern outlined above, it is a bit hard to watch. Contrary to what I thought at the time, I was probably hurting myself more than helping by perpetually resting for “projects” because:
- Time at the crag really is a precious commodity. This is something that a lot of kids don’t realize until it is too late (this applies to most things in life as well).
- Your project will be a lot easier to send if you build up a base of easier routes instead of skipping straight ahead to the hard shiznit as can be observed by the paltry send total on my route scorecard.
- Too much focus on results leads to over training which leads to severe and most likely chronic elbow tendonitis among other injuries.
When I get back to climbing, I know that I will do a better job of utilizing my time at the crag. Until then I am glad that I have all of the great climbing sites around today to keep me psyched.
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