Focus on giving your best effort to the climb rather than what you hope to get from it.
Make clear decisions and remain open to new information as the route unfolds. The Journey: Stay present and find meaning in the struggle. 4. Practice "Yes-Fall" vs. "No-Fall" Zones Mental Training for Climbing The Rock Warrior's Way The Rock Warrior's Way Mental Training for clim...
A guide to by Arno Ilgner focuses on mastering the mental game of climbing by treating every route as a journey of self-discovery. Rather than just pulling harder, this approach teaches you to use your attention flawlessly to manage fear and perform with calm mastery. 1. Shift Your Motivation Focus on giving your best effort to the
Once you leave the stance, stop over-analyzing. Transition into "doing" where you trust your body and intuition. Rather than just pulling harder, this approach teaches
Replace fear-based motivation (the desire to avoid falling or failure) with love-based motivation—a curiosity to learn and grow through stress. 2. Separate Thinking and Doing
Don't waste mental energy on things you can't control, like the distance to the next bolt or what others think of your performance. 3. Master the "Seven Processes"