• @[email protected]
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      275 days ago

      It’s hard to see from the shrunken picture, but he has a rope to catch him if he falls. The likelihood of an injury is very low.

      • @[email protected]
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        85 days ago

        I don’t think any of the climbers I know would call it an adrenaline sport. It’s slow, considered, thoughtful. It certainly gets a high sometimes, pun intended, but it’s much more akin to a runners high or the elation of finishing a difficult task well.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 days ago

          As a pretty serious rock climber, I would say it definitely is an adrenaline sport. But the adrenaline is just part of it. You also get the sort of runners high from sustained exercise, and another sort of high of “holy shit, I can’t believe I just pulled it off” from dealing with challenges in real time and finding solutions.

          In comparison, I tried sky diving once and found it, in a weird way, boring. Sure, you get an adrenaline rush - but there is no real physical or mental challenge. You just jump, deploy the chute, and land. When we landed, my heart was definitely pounding, but in a strangely unsatisfying way. I didn’t feel like I had really pushed myself or accomplished anything - I was just up there, and now I’m down here. Big whoop.

    • @[email protected]
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      115 days ago

      A what point does it change from unique hobby to death wish?

      100% when you remove the safety gear.

      The mountain, you see, is in nature; and Nature doesn’t give a fuck about your inability to fly once you pop off that flake.

    • @[email protected]
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      65 days ago

      When the likelihood of death is knowingly greater than the safety precautions taken to avoid death.