Dan belays (properly out of the road) at the Project Wall |
Instead of the melodramatic delusions centered on my own demise, I have to remember that Rifle is just that way. The cryptic beta required for upward progress is especially pronounced out there. You've got to build a steady relationship with the stone. All areas are like that. The more time you climb at any one place, the better it feels. While I was inefficiently quaking my way towards the anchors of each Rifle climb, I forgot that key lesson. Even though I have been climbing consistently, I wasn't repeating my days at one specific location.
Projecting, the type of climbing best suited to Rifle, is, at least for me, the transformation of a route from impossible to effortless. I miss that feeling of flowing through moves that were once terribly uncomfortable and difficult. I love to climb with precise efficiency on a route that is just at the edge of possible. Walking that fine line where a break in concentration means hanging from the rope requires so much time spent in methodical, dedicated practice. I'm hoping that these past few days in Rifle will come together to allow me to find that flowstate on one more project before the season ends.
Of course, the snow has to hold off, and I have to get back in order to test the theory. If I can't return to Rifle, I'll hopefully take that same ritual to Zion before Thanksgiving. Maybe I'll just have to content myself by commuting with Wally between other destinations in the American West. If that's the case, I won't have immense repetition to fall back on, and will instead just have to rely on experience and balance as I battle the self doubt that will inevitably creep in. No matter the situation, climbing is always a challenge. That's why it's so incredibly rewarding.
Team PatagoNeon |