Training is an important component in excelling at your
passions. And with training there comes recovery time. Currently, the group of
friends I’m with are going at it too hard and are paying for it. Why? Because
training requires recovery and there’s not a lot of that going on right now. I
admit, I too am a victim of this. Surprise, surprise, folks get injured when
you don’t take time off. Your mind says, Climb! But what about your body? When
your body tells you to rest, you better listen. After all, it’s your body you
rely on, your body is the tool and if you don’t take care of it… No one else
will, unless, your Mom followed you out to the crag. Unlikely. So you get hurt,
take more time off, and you’re frustrated. It is especially hard when everyone
around you is psyched to climb. Psych is contagious. The mountains are calling,
and there’s so many routes, so many new projects! When you see everyone having
fun good luck not being pulled into the fun. The next thing you know, you’re no
longer resting.
When
you figure out the perfect balance between playing, training, and resting, you
master your sport. It can be hard to train and rest while on the road. Training
might become inconsistent and resting is… boring. When you have a job or a
house it might be easier to rest because you have other distractions, other
things on the mind that require your focus outside of climbing. But when your
life revolves around your passions with the kind of focus that wakes you up at
6 am in the morning, then come rest day you wake up, take a deep breath, put
your shoes on and well, you end up feeling lost. When training is inconsistent
it leads to injury. With that being said, I found ways to train for climbing on
the road, for me switching up different climbing styles works well. Case in
point, I love sport climbing, it’s definitely where my heart lies. But
sometimes you hit a plateau and something has to change before you loose your
psych. I thrive off this constant change, which keeps the psych going. This is
the energy, the motivation that keeps me going and when I loose it I become a
different person. So what I do is take time away from ropes, pull out the
bouldering pads and fall my way up small, hard rocks. The climbing redirection
from sport to bouldering redirects my focus to power training. Just as it would
gym climbing when you untie your rope and walk over to the bouldering area. On
the road, you may not be able to lift weights, work a campus board or hang
board but I think you gain that sort of strength with all the climbing. For
example, this winter, after I bouldered in Bishop CA and got back on ropes there
was a short transition gaining back endurance, but in the long run when I did, all
my hard work paid off. Instead of injured or bored I was unstoppable. And when
I say unstoppable, I mean it was beautiful. Until then I was never good at ‘power’
always just dancing my way up the wall, I mean I still do that but now I feel a
shift in my level of climbing. The difference my boulder training had on my
contact strength, the way it shaped my ability to make moves when pumped
allowed me to not only stick moves but continue to the next. I even experienced
an increased mental strength! It was the coolest thing in the world. Well at
least in my world. Long story short, master your passion.