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Bang Nhan
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Jun 5, 2011
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Charlottesville, VA
· Joined Dec 2010
· Points: 35
Not sure if this is an old topic, but I am curious how many of you folks find climbing and that kind of mentality help in your daily jobs/careers?
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Mike
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Jun 5, 2011
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Phoenix
· Joined May 2006
· Points: 2,615
Um, maybe a little tiny bit.
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wankel7
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Jun 5, 2011
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Indiana
· Joined Oct 2010
· Points: 10
My current job sure as hell doesnt help my climbing.
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Bang Nhan
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Jun 5, 2011
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Charlottesville, VA
· Joined Dec 2010
· Points: 35
Someone told me that climbing is some kind of mental training in being focus and presistent. On top of that, courage is significant too. I think a lot of jobs out there do need you to have one of these three thigns to get a task done.
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DannyUncanny
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Jun 5, 2011
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Vancouver
· Joined Aug 2010
· Points: 100
It gives me something to think about when I'm zoning out.
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Bobby Hanson
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Jun 5, 2011
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Tucson, AZ
· Joined Oct 2001
· Points: 1,270
For me, the mental and emotional aspects relate directly. When I am climbing well, I am "zoned out," where my focus is outside of myself and my mind is quiet. This also happens when I am skiing -- more often, in fact. Perhaps strangely, my mind is in the same place when I am working on a math problem.
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wendy weiss
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Jun 5, 2011
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boulder, co
· Joined Mar 2006
· Points: 10
Generally no. But I once surprised a geomorphologist in a deposition by having my co-counsel ask him if he was aware of the "mass wasting" at Cob Rock.
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ethlogo
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Jun 5, 2011
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Jan 2011
· Points: 0
Climbing, or more likely my answer to why I climb, was at least partially responsible for my current job, so yes.
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erik wellborn
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Jun 5, 2011
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manitou springs
· Joined Apr 2008
· Points: 355
Alpine climbing and working construction seem to both involve a fair bit of drinking, so yes, there are some parallels...
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jay durbin
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Jun 5, 2011
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Streator, il
· Joined Sep 2010
· Points: 5
my last job was a great training tool for climbing. not only is post frame construction hard larbor, i got to climb all over the buildings building strength and endurance. and some of the buildings the trusses were 35-40' in the air, and i got to climb all over them. oh, and we grabbed a 12 pack every dayon the way home, so its like post climbing beverages. since loosing that job my climbing has gone way down(lack of funds) and my endurance has too. damn, i need a good paying job again!!
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Woodchuck ATC
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Jun 5, 2011
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Unknown Hometown
· Joined Nov 2007
· Points: 3,305
Yup. I used my ropes, pulleys, jumars etc. to teach simple machines, mechanical advantage and 'mountain rescue' with my 7-8th graders for years. We attached ropes about 30 ft. up to auditorium roof and hauled kids up and down via pulley systems. I did it for many years in the mid 90's until they just wouldn't let us have fun anymore in teaching/;-( sucks now.
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bergbryce
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Jun 6, 2011
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California
· Joined Aug 2009
· Points: 145
Pretty sure my boss wishes I didn't climb so I wouldn't always asking for time off to go do it. Edited to add: On second thought though... it has created a strong desire to improve efficiency so I can get out more, which has caused me to learn some new skills. This has allowed me to get my work done faster (via programming), which in the big pictures has had several other unintended benefits. So I guess it has and in a positive way, somewhat.
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chris vultaggio
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Jun 6, 2011
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The Gunks
· Joined Dec 2008
· Points: 540
Absolutely - I'm a photog and covering live events and can often get the leg up on competition by climbing trees, buildings, pillars, chimney-ing up in between pillars, hanging from rafters...
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Gregger Man
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Jun 6, 2011
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Broomfield, CO
· Joined Aug 2004
· Points: 1,859
I have found myself working with sharp tools repairing someone else's $30,000 guitar and felt the same pucker factor that comes with a good runout.
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Jon H
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Jun 6, 2011
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PC, UT
· Joined Nov 2009
· Points: 118
I'm a home inspector, so climbing definitely has me more confident when walking on a roof.... just like soloing loose, gritty slabs. When attic access is through a ceiling hatch 8' above the ground, none of my fatty colleagues can even conceive of doing a pull-up into the hatch, mantle above the rim, hand foot match on the hatch framing, then reach up into the attic cavity, pinch a rafter, and "top out." Sweet beta.
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Olaf Mitchell
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Jun 6, 2011
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Paia, Maui, Hi,
· Joined Mar 2007
· Points: 4,185
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Andrew Bradberry
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Jun 6, 2011
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Golden, CO
· Joined Jul 2009
· Points: 100
Interesting question! I work as a paramedic, and I would say that climbing has tought me a lot about how to make critical decisions under stress.
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H BL
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Jun 6, 2011
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Colorado
· Joined Feb 2006
· Points: 95
That's a good quesion. I sit a a desk most of my day as I am a Mortgage Banker, but the photos on my wall almost always open up a conversation between my clients and myself. But I can generally find something that applies in life. Metaphorically speaking, the crux can be like the difficult areas in life. They can be really hard to get through and then (sometimes) you look back on the experience and say "WOW! I made that out to be a lot harder than it should have been."
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Scott O
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Jun 6, 2011
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Anchorage
· Joined Mar 2010
· Points: 70
Andrew Bradberry wrote:Interesting question! I work as a paramedic, and I would say that climbing has tought me a lot about how to make critical decisions under stress. Similar story here.
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Guy H.
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Jun 6, 2011
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Fort Collins CO
· Joined Jan 2001
· Points: 8,388
Climbing definitely helps your learn how to take risks, instead of always playing it safe. If you don't think you can achieve a goal, you probably won't try and find out.
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Chris Duca
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Jun 6, 2011
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Dixfield, ME
· Joined Dec 2006
· Points: 2,485
Dealing with testy parents of students in my school is like negotiating a lichen-covered slab on a hot July day at Cathedral Ledge. So to answer your question--yes, it does apply sometimes.
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