Emulating Dangerous Sports - True or False

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ms55401

Trad climber
minneapolis, mn
May 20, 2015 - 09:18pm PT
a credible study would require a well-funded, scientific approach, likely by a well-known university

serious post?
Kalimon

Social climber
Ridgway, CO
May 20, 2015 - 09:18pm PT
How many of you out there have been duped or encouraged into doing dangerous shite that you never would have done otherwise save for trying to emulate your "heros?"

It must depend on the individual. Most people will realize that they need to work their way up the ladder rather than leaping right for the top . . . to imitate the potentially deadly act performed by someone far beyond your own ability level is in itself poor decision making.

"No guru, no teacher, no method."
jstan

climber
May 20, 2015 - 10:09pm PT
After reading posts too numerous to count, from people all saying they found Dean inspiring, it is not too much to conclude to one degree or another people were influenced. Now let's take a slightly wider view.

Jeb Corliss seems to get more press from his exploits than does anyone else. Recently he flew through a passage in China not significantly larger than himself. (Not the cave.) According to those who have viewed photos from Dean's camera, he and Graham actually collided as they were passing through the notch, by itself an expert exit some say. Possibly they were attempting a side by side passage.

It is just possible these two deaths were examples of precisely that which JL seeks

If that is not enough consider auto racing, the more dangerous olympic sports, alpine climbing and the Guinness book of world records.

Rick Sylvester made a comment above that is very much to the point. "Once you have mounted the tiger, it is very difficult to get off." As we all try to express our pain over what has happened we need to try and deal with perhaps the real core of the problem.

As the audience, we and our fascination with such things

may be the tiger.
Delhi Dog

climber
Good Question...
May 20, 2015 - 10:46pm PT
Seems Ojai Alex gave John an example. Guy didn't die but John wasn't asking only for deaths.
The fact that there is 1 seems to me to point to the very likelihood of more than one.

Quantifying the number, if any, of people emulating Honnold, Potter et al would be a nearly impossible task. Someone would have to say...."I'm going out to do just what so and so did."

I'm not saying that I think people do or don't emulate extreme sport legends....I'm just saying establishing a metric would be extremely difficult.-Donini

My thoughts too.
Ward Trotter

Trad climber
May 20, 2015 - 11:02pm PT
Something is not meshing here:

"Clif Bar’s decision (to withdraw sponsorship from Potter, Honnold, etc.) was a controversial one that came under heavy critique by the climbing community, who noted that Potter and the other dropped athletes were some of the most incredible and innovative athletes on the planet, the people who take sports to new places and offer a glimpse into what is possible. Others expressed support for the idea that a company shouldn’t be promoting activities – especially in an age of YouTube and viral videos, where young people might seek to emulate and copy the stunts they see their heroes doing – and which have such a high risk of death."

At this stage we have "others" in the above sentence seeming to clearly indicate a sampling of the opinions of members of the "climbing community" and not an opinion generated by Clif Bar itself. I say this without access to the full article,so I could be missing something.(If my reading is correct then the author of this article was openly suggesting that some climbers were advancing the emulation idea in their reaction to Clif Bar's revoking sponsorship--which is frankly somewhat hard to believe,although not completely)

Unless I'm entertaining the wrong presumption,therefore the statement:

The implied message here is that Cliff Bar feared...

Is an erroneous reading of the content of the article cited, and not a firm basis for suggesting that Clif Bar in this context was promulgating the unsubstantiated emulation "theory."

QUINTL and some others got it right when he stated:

That's the stated reason. I don't see anything elsewhere. If they were worried about emulation, I'd expect them to say that -

The entire thread seems to have been at the outset-- at least the bit regarding Clif Bar-- based partly upon an erroneous reading of the context of the cited article excerpt. Again,unless I'm missing something.
WBraun

climber
May 20, 2015 - 11:04pm PT
Ken M -- "That would be Potter and Hunt, to choose the most recent example.

They must have been inspired by someone doing something.

They were both wrong, and played above their level of skill."


Nope ... only foolish nihilists project nonsense like Ken M
Ken M

Mountain climber
Los Angeles, Ca
May 20, 2015 - 11:25pm PT
As Kalimon just said: There is practically no evidence of the monkey see, monkey do dynamic going on here. It takes so much time and dedication to achieve the levels currently being practiced by the elite athletes of these disciplines that very few from the "mainstream" population can even imagine starting on the road to such endeavors.

To suggest that those in this elite level are there only by dint of peer pressure or through trying to ape their mentors seems unlikely to me and is nothing I have ever seen.

John, it was *you* that created this argument, seemingly so that you could shoot it down. You have posted NOTHING that indicates that was the motivation of Cliff. We aren't any more interested in your "theories" than you are in ours. Show us evidence of Cliff's position, or give up.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 20, 2015 - 11:58pm PT
when we see a thing and it gets us thinking, the consequences can be quite astounding. Could we climb that rock face? could we fly like the ravens?

who knows where that leads, or could lead

our "heros" are all around us, extolling us on to be better and better, they don't always know how they are being heard

IME, there are various modes of understanding. There is a discursive understanding that looks at components and associations and functioning or at any rate various computations. This is a kind of instrumentational take on something. It is objective because what the instruments tell us is apparently conjured by the instruments, not our sense data. Our sight is limited for, say, microscope work on proteins. A microscope, greatly enhances our ability to accurately deconstruct a given protein into relevant components, and go from there with our symbolic wranglings (numbers, words, etc.).

Another kind of knowing is direct experience, or direct encountering. Whereas the first mode provided the topo map, the second involves actually climbing the wall as our sentience absorbs the totality of it in real time. In the later, we come to "know" the wall in ways not possible from the discursive perspective, just as the discursive can tell us things about the physical nature of the wall not evident while actually climbing it.

The experiential mode is not an attempt to do the work of the strictly discursive, nor is the discursive an attempt to understand the experiential. They are two side of the same coin - human reality - but each is a perspective with angles impossible to see from the opposite side.

JL

can you imagine what it is like to soar like those two in my image above, in that sublime setting of golden granite?

is that a dangerous thought? to perhaps believe you might find a way to do it? and then to experience it?

maybe jstan is right, but we can imagine those things, and not only that, we understand how to start along the way of realizing what we imagine. And whether or not we can actually pull it off has real risk involved, the consequences of which we weigh, and then choose of our own volition.

A choice informed by the sum of all our experiences, of everything we have learned, the sum of our human existence, but it is a choice we make alone, ultimately, it is, after all, our experience.

Largo's OP polemic seems to miss the mark.

BLUEBLOCR

Social climber
joshua tree
May 21, 2015 - 12:08am PT
Kids certainly emmulate their hero's. Weather it be from video games, YouTube, reading, or first hand experience. Kids do what they see other kids doing! It's called Evolution; The changing of an genetic organism by interaction with/against the environment.

A "health" food bar co. like Cliff Bar doesn't make any money from the followers of Extreme Athletes pushin the barriers,and rackin up a death toll : ( Only gym rats and sport climbers eat cliff bars anyway.

All sponsors want something of their athletes..

Take RedBull, They encourage their athletes to go higher, faster, longer, etc, with the allure of the all mighty dollar. Redbulls product certainly isn't good for the health. A girl actually died by drinking to many in a day. It's amazing there haven't been more deaths in the sports RB sponsors.i doubt if Baja Raceing, Formula 1, or Supercross combined will have as bad a year as BaseJumping has had!



Shouldn't it be concieved that if a sponsor baits their athlete to "go a little higher", knowing the reprocussion could lead to death, and sure enough it did. They could be held liable? Maybe not monetarily(cause of signed waivers), but spiritually!

Maybe a company like Cliff Bar didn't want the public to hold that kind of suspicion? Or the guilt.


Edit: Mighty hiker, Nice post!
About that head cam video, shouldn't the next of kin hold "the rights" to it? Why can NPS release it to the public? That could be worth a lot of coin, you know, to the ghoulish a#%holes chompin at the bit
rockermike

Trad climber
Berkeley
May 21, 2015 - 01:59am PT
if anyone can stand watching another wingsuit vid... here's one (french guy). last comment in the video is a kid saying 'I'm going to do that when I get big'. hmmm

https://vimeo.com/50006726
Degaine

climber
May 21, 2015 - 03:25am PT
If you look at the statistics for mountain sports (ski touring, mountaineering, etc.), the majority of accidents/deaths are made up of middle-aged men with considerable experience.

Here's a good report and analysis on accidents in the mountains:
http://www.petzl.com/fondation/foundation-accidentologie-livret_EN.pdf?v=1

I believe the same goes for BASE jumping / wingsuiting (as was stated in this or another thread), but I don't have the stats.

Based on the above stats and other accident information I've read, droves of newbies are not getting knocked off in the mountains. My educated guess would be that in mountain sports (climbing, mountaineering, skiing steep enough terrain to avalanche, BASE, etc.) the fear and survival instinct kick in pretty early to dissuade any "copycats" from going to far.

Activities like Parkour became popular, but in spite of the millions of views of experienced "parkourists" backflipping from one high-rise apartment building to the next, to my knowledge there have not been any mass newbie deaths doing the same. Again, my educated guess would be that the immediate fear and survival instinct triggered are just too strong.

The same doesn't go for advertising or glorifying slow-killers like smoking or overeating - habits people have historically "emulated" or copied in mass.
Mom

Social climber
So Cal
May 21, 2015 - 04:22am PT
The tragic deaths of Dean Potter and Graham Hunt are disturbing, untimely, senseless and causes each of us to deal with the unsettled facets of the event until it fits neatly back into our kitbag of our philosophy of our life 101. As a mother, grandmother, auntie, Earth Mother, my spirit is extremely heavy with the loss of such talented gentlemen who had more to create and share; we are all poorer without them. My thoughts will be for all who choose the edge, the speed, the height, the depths, that you will choose to honor and protect the sanctity of your life; treat it with care and adoration.

Regarding Clif Bar pulling sponsorships....Dean had a sketchy record of pushing the legal envelope. Base jumping is illegal in Yose, yet he elected to let his drive override the quest for the straight and narrow, legal adventure. Clif Bar could possibly have found itself being sued or subject to other legal entanglements should a novice try to emulate those whose reputation is one of living/performing on the edge while receiving Clif Bar's seal of approval, blessing, sponsorship, etc.... I believe the corporation has acted in the best interest of the entity and protecting the product and stockholders.

Be well & blessed.
duncan

climber
London, UK
May 21, 2015 - 04:53am PT
Perhaps a better question is: How many of you out there have been duped or encouraged into doing dangerous shite that you never would have done otherwise save for trying to emulate your "heros?"

I was an enthusiastic free-soloist for the first four or five years of my early climbing career (30 years BY - before YouTube). I was consciously aping people like you JL and those you wrote about. Fortunately, like most, I survived my youth.

Nowadays I go to the opera but I don't find myself encouraged to high risk behaviour like spending my entire month's wages in one night down the pub (La Bohème) or marrying my sister (Die Walküre). Perhaps emulating your heroes is a young person's thing?
Charlie D.

Trad climber
Western Slope, Tahoe Sierra
May 21, 2015 - 05:20am PT
amen mom, the entity does not have a conscience it has business interests plain and simple.
Chugach

Trad climber
Vermont
May 21, 2015 - 05:52am PT
Largo,

I originally wrote a more benign post but I'm back after a few minutes of reflection. I have great respect for you but think you're trying to ease your conscience with a delicate argument. YOU have lured LOTS of people into climbing, including me. When I soloed it wasnt because it made sense it's because my climbing hero's did and said it was awesome and I wanted to experience climbing to the fullest so I took my hero's advice. Most climber bio's start with some story about learning on Mom's clothes line or some ill-informed foray like Dean Potters solos of local cliff. How many articles have you written that follow either the heroic overcoming of odds or the bumbling guy who got lucky and survived or toughing it out leads to success storyline?

Can i draw I direct link from your writing to someone's death - no. Does that relieve you or some responsibility - no. The entire climbing community is built on luring noobs in over their heads, or even experienced climbers to keep pushing to limits. We all know that and we participate in it. The magazines and books are not filled with motherly advice but with a common theme of pushing it. I pushed it (a little) and I lived. If I had died it would have been pursuing a directly inspired activity.

Let's be clear, I am not assigning blame, I am assigning the awareness of responsibility.

Ok, let's depersonalize it a little and look at entrepreneurship. Go to the bookstore, hundreds of books and dozens of magazines about how awesome entrepreneurship is with the familiar storyline of climbing; bootstrapping it, in over your head, perseverance, success. But people get wiped out. They bet big, lose their business, wreck their marriage, health, etc. It's absolutely tragic but no one takes responsibility for the culture of luring people onward. We just say; oh that was an outlier, focus on the Steve Jobs story again. (Don't worry about Bachar, pay attention to Dean. Oh, I mean pay attention to Alex - see it's not that dangerous, look at Alex go. Go Alex go). Bachar is gone and his lessons dont influence young climbers. A year from now the same with Dean and Alex will still be getting all the press and youtubes.

The forward arc of human development is people taking risks and pushing limits. I get that. I'm an climber and entrepreneur and it's in my DNA to take risks and like a moth to a flame I was inspired by your stories and Dean's videos. Hell, even at the age of 48 I totally want to wingsuit because I've been drooling over the videos. That would have never happened before the age of youtube/gopro.

But just because I'm part of the problem doesn't absolve me of the responsibility of my words. If I spent a lot of time showboating or luring people into my activities I would have to take some responsibility for their outcomes. Based on all that, I think Cliff Bar got it right and the climbing culture has gotten it wrong.




pyro

Big Wall climber
Calabasas
May 21, 2015 - 06:05am PT
again noobs are going to do crazy shit

Lol Soo true
Rhodo-Router

Gym climber
sawatch choss
May 21, 2015 - 06:22am PT
Largo-

In the realm of writing that explicitly elevates the testosterone-fuelled exploits of adolescent males into the canon of epic man-vs.-nature battle, your own tales bestride the heap like a Colossus. You gonna jump on everyone else for this practice now, with the wisdom of your age?

They certainly had an effect on me.
pb

Sport climber
Sonora Ca
May 21, 2015 - 06:53am PT
It's illuminating to read comments about this event on other forums. We are rightfully, but somewhat uncharacteristically, cautious in our posts on this topic. We flirt with gravity, but we are not birds. We savor danger; that doesn't make us lions.
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
May 21, 2015 - 07:05am PT
I imagine Potter and Hunt's route of flight is atop every serious flyers list about now. Why? Not because its there, more like the top gun mentality.
zBrown

Ice climber
Brujò de la Playa y Perrito Ruby
May 21, 2015 - 07:11am PT
The OP quote is from a newspaper. What did Clif Bar actually say?
Messages 21 - 40 of total 147 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
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