Climb Smarter: Mental Skills and Techniques for Climbing
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About this ebook
We all know that climbing is a headgame, and many climbers recognise that their mindset is holding them back. But what psychological skills do you need for climbing, and how do you develop them? If you have ever wanted to learn how to climb with more confidence, to learn how to stick to a training plan, or to understand how to tap into flow
Rebecca Williams
Dr Rebecca Williams is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and performance psychology coach, working with climbers for the last 15 years. She's trained and experienced in psychotherapy, including CBT and ACT, holds a level 7 certificate in coaching and mentoring, and is a qualified climbing instructor (RCI).
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Climb Smarter - Rebecca Williams
CLIMB
SMARTER
Praise for Climb Smarter
As a climber and sport psychologist, Rebecca Williams’ book,
Climb Smarter, explores her practical approach to mental challenges in a way that is easy to understand. I feel mentally stronger after reading and I can’t wait to go climbing again.
~ Madeline Crane: Climbing Psychology
In Climb Smarter, Dr Williams has given the climbing community a mental training guide that has everything in one text: Scientific rigor, the depth of knowledge, compassion and understanding that comes from a clinical psychologist, and the hands-on experience of a seasoned climbing coach. This text is set to become the industry benchmark by which all mental training advice can be measured. Whether your inner struggles are with confidence, motivation, falling or failing, all the tools you need to grow as a climber and a human can be found in this comprehensive guide. To really excel at climbing, training the mind needs to become a routine behaviour - and for that journey I cannot recommend this book highly enough.
~ John Kettle: Climbing Coach Performance Coach, WMCI
An extraordinary and brilliant book, with golden insightful nuggets from the first chapter all the way through. These nuggets will help improve your climbing and quite possibly your lifestyle, taking a holistic look at the many factors which can affect our mental state, how to measure them and make changes if we feel we need to. Rebecca brings the science and evidence together in a logical way which is easy to digest. A must buy for any keen climbers wanting to get on top of their head game.
~ James McHaffie: Pro Climber
Finding your ‘why’ - in my decades of climbing and coaching I find myself always going back to this fundamental assessment. Regardless if i was considering a scary climb, or when trying to help a frustrated athlete,
what is it that you love about climbing?" is often the central question to ask.
Rebecca Williams’ new Climb Smarter Book is of great help for any climbing related inner struggle you might have (or want to help somebody with). It is clearly written and structured and offers actionable exercises as well as case examples that help you to learn about yourself and face climbing’s mental challenges.
From life values to climbing values and back - the Climb Smarter Book is a valuable read for everyone - not only climbers!"
~ Udo Neumann: Climbing Coach, Writer
Climb Smarter is more than a sport psychology book. It is written by a climber for climbers with brilliantly specific explanations, case studies, activities and worksheets to help your mind help your body to take your climbing to the next level.
~ Dr Josephine Perry: Chartered Sport Psychologist, www.performanceinmind.co.uk
CLIMB
SMARTER
MENTAL SKILLS AND
TECHNIQUES FOR CLIMBING
Dr Rebecca Williams
Every possible effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this book is accurate at the time of going to press. The publishers and author(s) cannot accept responsibility for any errors and omissions, however caused. No responsibility for loss or damage occasioned to any person acting, or refraining from action, as a result of the material contained in this publication can be accepted by the editor, the publisher or the author.
First published in 2022 by Sequoia Books
Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publisher, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publisher using the details on the website www.sequoia-books.com.
©Sequoia Books 2022
The right of Dr Rebecca Williams to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents act 1988.
ISBN
Print: 9781914110146
EPUB: 9781914110153
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing-In-Publication Data
Name: Dr Rebecca Williams
Title: Climb Smarter / Dr Rebecca Williams
Description: 1st Edition, Sequoia Books UK 2022Subjects: LCSH:. Sport Psychology. Sports-Psychological Aspects
Print: 9781914110146
EPUB: 9781914110153
Library of Congress Control Number: 2022903330
Print and Electronic production managed by Deanta Global
Cover Image photographer: Ray WoodClimber: Alexandra Schweikart on the top pitch of The Mask (E5 6a), Fair Head, Ireland
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Section 1: Planning
1 Psychological skills for climbing: Analysing your strengths and weaknesses
2 Dreams, values and goals
3 Sticking to your mental training plan: Habits and behaviour change
Section 1: Summary
Section 2: Fixing problems in your climbing: Common fears, anxieties and worries
4 Introduction to fear, anxiety and worries in climbing
5 Basic anxiety management for climbing
6 Fear of falling – what to consider
7 Undertaking fall practice indoors
8 Adapting falling practice for outdoor sport climbing, bouldering or trad
9 The social side of climbing
10 Other common worries and fears
Section 2: Summary
Section 3: Finessing your mental skills
11 Climbing confidently
12 Focusing
13 Imagery and visualisation
14 Being adaptable: Problem-solving and movement creativity
Section 3: Summary
15 Final thoughts: Climbing for life – mental wellbeing for climbers
Notes
References
Acknowledgements
Three years ago I met a brilliant psychologist working with climbers, at the International Rock Climbing Research Association congress in Chamonix in 2018. We got chatting about shared experiences and ideas, and she encouraged me to write a book about my experiences of coaching climbers. Fast-forward three years and we are continuing to collaborate and develop resources for climbers – thank you Dr Maria Ionel for getting me started on this journey.
Huge thanks also to Pete and Rach Robins for reading some early drafts and giving honest and clear feedback. In the middle (and painful part), I had a lot of help from Pete Edwards; thanks to him for chasing down the elusive references and offering feedback and insights.
Most important of all however, I am extremely grateful to my family – Pete, Tali and Mabon – for supporting me in writing, by (mostly) leaving me alone in the mornings so I could write, and for offering encouragement when I lost motivation. I hope my boys can be inspired to give their own big projects a go in the future (and may they never have to type with a four-year-old on their lap!).
Climber studies
The climber studies are composite case studies of a few of the people I have coached around common themes, over the last 15 years. All names are pseudonyms, and any identifying details have been changed to protect their identities.
Introduction
I first got into sport as a young kid, watching gymnastics on the TV. My parents were both climbers but had given all that up to run a smallholding in North Wales by the time I came along, and they were happy to indulge me in my new-found obsession. A perfectionist child, I excelled at following the training plans, and revelled in learning how to make my body create the twists, turns, jumps and acrobatics I had once watched spellbound on the TV. However, years of training later and after a series of injuries, I had several experiences of what I now know was choking – being completely unable to complete well-rehearsed moves, paralysed with anxiety. Back then, no one mentioned how sport psychology could help, and you were simply seen as either having the head for gym or not. Being unable to overcome my ‘episodes’ by myself, and with coaches telling me I just didn’t have it, in the end I quit the sport, devastated. It left a big hole in my life for some time, before I found other sports to take its place.
Fast-forward 35 years or so, and I’ve just watched the greatest gymnast of all time, Simone Biles, pull out of an Olympic final due to an attack of the ‘twisties’. She was losing track of where she was in space during her double somersaults with triple twists (and who wouldn’t?!) and with the full support of her coaches, team and gym community, she prioritised her own welfare over competing. Even more incredible was to see that support translate into coming back into the beam final and winning a medal. I don’t know whether she accessed sport psychology help in the interim, but I think it illustrates how the mindset has shifted from ‘got it/not got it’ to ‘let’s work on it’ for the mental skills required for various sports.
I think the climbing community has been a bit behind the curve in adopting sport psychology techniques. Some still cling to the notion that you either have the head for climbing or you don’t, and that fears and worries and mental blocks are ‘irrational’ and therefore somehow indicate an internal weakness and unsuitability for climbing. This is not something I subscribe to, with both personal and professional experience to the contrary. Over the last 15 years or so, I have watched many coaching clients learn new skills to enhance their climbing, break through personal grade barriers, send their projects or simply enjoy climbing more. Most climbers I know want to improve, and whilst many will opt for physical improvements, fewer will take the arguably harder path of making mental improvements. The gains are less easy to measure, and you have to be diligent in applying yourself over time, but change is possible. No one should write themselves off as not having a head for heights/leading/competing – we can learn how to get our mind and body in sync, with the right tools.
My own climbing journey began quite late as I was studying for my doctorate in clinical psychology. I gave it a try on a National Trust conservation holiday, wherein between hacking at rhododendrons, we had some light relief in the form of climbing. Our instructor was none other than Nick Dixon, and if I had known who he was in climbing circles at the time, I probably would have swooned with stardom! Anyway, a couple of top ropes and I was hooked, taking it up at Rock City climbing wall in Hull as a great stress relief when studying, and meeting a whole new community of people. My progression followed a very similar trajectory as I see in many climbers – rapid progression, plateau and then a huge and catastrophic tail off in performance as I began to realise what the risks were. I was curious as to why my meltdowns happened on easier stuff – next to the bolt on a 5+, stepping over the void on a VDiff, on the easy warm-up routes in Sardinia – and never when I was pushing the boat out. My old demons from gymnastics came back to haunt me, and I floundered around for a while before realising that I had the answers at my finger tips from studying psychology. This time around, I understood what was happening, and by now, sport psychology was a thing and there were research papers, self-help books and advice to be found. I applied the anxiety management techniques I knew from my work as a trainee psychologist, devoured all the papers and self-help books I could find and eventually found a balance in my climbing. I’ll never be a mega hard trad leader (E1 was the best I managed), but I realised that for routes I was passionate about, I could manage my nerves and harness the joy I found in unlocking sequences on the rock, and my perfectionistic diligence in finding efficient and flowing movement. These days I mostly boulder, partly due to time (having a young family, a chronic health condition, and being self-employed) but partly also because it’s the distillation of what I love about climbing – solving movement puzzles on rock. It’s a physical and mental workout, and it reminds me of my days as a gymnast, figuring out how to move my body through space in the most elegant and efficient way possible.
This book brings together all the lessons I learnt as a psychologist and climber, and as a coach to climbers, weaving together the knowledge and covering any gaps in the tapestry with research drawn across from other sports. As soon as I publish this book, I hope it will be quickly updated as climbing research, still in its infancy, will no doubt be given a huge push by the inclusion of climbing in the Olympics. Given its popularity at Tokyo, I suspect funding may follow, and researchers can start finally testing out some of the practices and exercises, and seeing what works, for whom and why. For now, this book represents my best clinical practice-based evidence, outlining common problems climbers have, and how they can be managed to improve their psychological performance and therefore their climbing.
I hope you enjoy learning the broad variety of techniques in this book, applying them to your own climbing, and hopefully finding or re-discovering the inherent joy of moving freely over rock, unencumbered by mental demons. This book is for anyone who ever wished they could improve their headgame for climbing. It covers how to fix common problems climbers face, as well as how to enhance and finesse your performance using mental training strategies. There is also a section on tactics and creative problem-solving, which is a key skill for climbers who feel as though their strategies and movement patterns are stuck in a bit of a rut. It is highly practical, and you won’t find any ‘just do this’ in it; I explain exactly how to develop the skills you need to climb smarter, by using your head, so you can use the physical and technical skills you have to their best ability.
What the book can’t do is magically transform your climbing after you read it, unfortunately! Training mental skills is the long game, and you should set yourself a skill, chapter or topic per month to focus on, alongside your regular climbing and training. The aim is to take some of the mystery out of what the key mental attributes for climbing are, help you to understand climbing psychology a little better and give you practical tools to improve your focus, confidence, anxiety and reduce frustrations! Ultimately though, by sorting some of the issues in your climbing, and learning mental skills to enhance how you climb, I hope that you will find more fun and enjoyment in your climbing.
Section 1
Planning
This first section is all about planning and preparation – your time and energy are both precious and finite, so make the most of them by spending time at the outset getting all your ducks in a row rather than heading off on a wild goose chase. If you really want to commit to making long-term changes, then some hours spent reflecting, thinking and planning now will pay dividends in terms of being able to direct your efforts to best effect change. If you’re not the sort of climber who sets goals, that’s ok (plenty of climbers don’t and enjoy their climbing just fine), but I’m guessing that you bought this book because you want to improve and have an interest in training your mind to help you climb harder, or climb with less fear and worry.
Being a ‘better climber’ is a common goal for my coaching clients, and it’s a great starting place, but it doesn’t tell me or them much about what we need to do for them to improve, or how much better or more relaxed they want to be in order to feel satisfied with their climbing. There is a saying, start with the end in mind, so we need to think about our destination, in order to best plan the best way to get there: what mental skills do we need to develop? Which psychological skills will help us to be a better climber?
We also need to know where we are starting from in the first place, to make sure we don’t waste time covering old ground, so a good assessment of our current mental skills is important. We need a reason why to take the improvement journey and inventory of what we need to get from a to b, so we can stay motivated and on track. For these reasons, we need to think about where we are, where we want to go, why we are going and what we need in our rucksack. This means assessing our current strengths and weaknesses as a climber, figuring out the improvements we want to make and what the end point might look like, having good reasons to make the changes and what skills we need to learn along the way.
CHAPTER 1
Psychological skills for climbing
Analysing your strengths and weaknesses
Part and parcel of setting appropriate goals for yourself is having a really clear sense of where your strengths and weaknesses lie as a climber. There are plenty of tools out there which can help you to measure your current technical, tactical and technique skills,¹ but few which outline the main psychological skills needed for climbing. This chapter is all about the key mental skills required for climbing, and how to measure and analyse your starting point and ongoing progress.
What do we know about mental skills for climbing?
If you’re a climber then you’ll know at an instinctive level that what happens in our heads has a large role in predicting the outcomes on the rock. Some research has suggested that psychological skills may have a larger role to play than physiological parameters,² but surprisingly there has been very little good-quality research on the psychological or mental skills necessary for climbing. We have anecdotal evidence from elite climbers and coaches, but in terms of good-quality research evidence, this is an area ripe for investigation. We can draw some parallels from other sports such as gymnastics or diving for example, but climbing poses some unique challenges in that it doesn’t rely on a routine set of movements, performed in the same sequence over and over again, and indeed any given route may have multiple solutions depending on the style of the climber.
For onsight climbing, the ability to quickly find efficient movement solutions to novel problems is crucial,³ and we still don’t fully understand the range of skills and practices required to develop this ability. It is likely that visual-spatial problem-solving skills are helpful here, but how do we develop them, especially if you are not someone to whom this comes easily? If we are into redpointing, then the ability to memorise a long sequence of complex moves becomes crucial, so what is the best way of developing route memory? These questions have yet to be answered in research terms, though coaches and climbers will have their own favourite ways of teaching this.
There will be many general skills in common with other sports; for example, we know the ability to set good goals is helpful for sport development.⁴ We also know from other sports that the ability to manage our emotions is helpful for confidence. However, climbing (and other adventure sports) is classified differently to mainstream sports such as running or other track and field sports due to the perceived risk to the climber. Whilst we may have ropes, gear and belayers to protect us, climbing may often feel like a ‘risky’ activity, and whilst roped climbing relies upon a solid belay partner, it has a very different feel to team sports with an element of combat in them such as rugby or football for example. So how might the emotional control elements differ for climbers as compared to other sports?
Visual inspection skills – route reading
What do we know so far about the mental skills required for climbing? Elite climbers and coaches agree that what happens even before we climb is important for a successful ascent. This includes being able to accurately visually inspect a route and see the potential moves, links and sequences. This skill is likely composed of a series of micro skills – route reading, route memory, rest identification and memory for rests/recovery points, as well as being able to notice and discount irrelevant hold information. In controlled experiments, route previewing has been shown to reduce the number of stops and pauses on a route but not necessarily to directly impact on whether the route was sent or not;⁵ this was regardless of the climber’s ability level. So there is an argument for practising route previewing regardless of whether you are fairly novice or experienced as a climber, in that you are more likely to select the optimal sequence if you are good at route previewing.⁶
Adaptability and creativity
There is also a vast array of information to be taken into account whilst climbing – variabilities in rock types and holds and therefore movement patterns, environmental changes making conditions different on a frequent basis, and changes in the practice itself – onsight/flash, redpointing, headpointing, seconding, bottom roping, soloing, bouldering and so on. Grading systems provide a very broad-brush categorisation of difficulty, but given the subjectivity involved, they say little about the multitude of variables which will affect you as the climber on that particular route on that particular day. So some ability to perceive all the variables and weigh up their relative impact and how to manage them to their best effect is key.⁷ This is both a huge information processing challenge, and requires a commensurate organisation of motor actions in response to the constraints of the route.⁸ In simple terms, we could call this the ability to ‘break down’ a route into all the relevant factors we need to consider, and make sound decisions about how to weigh up and act on all these factors, and adaptability is crucial to this.
Focus
Attention and concentration skills have also been shown to be important.⁹ Depending on the length of the route, you may need to sustain your focus anywhere from a couple of minutes to 60 minutes for a longish trad pitch, tuning out the potential distractions of other people climbing nearby, changes in weather, wind, caterpillars crawling out of cracks (I remember this being a big issue one year at Tremadog!) and so on! There is also a need to tune into the rock in front of you if you are onsighting or problem-solving on the go, focusing on small affordances/edges that give you opportunities for moves, and the bigger motor control picture of what is happening in your body as you move and how to move and rest for maximum efficiency. It is certainly off putting at that point to have the focus switch to your thoughts or feelings, especially if they are negative or unhelpful.
Executive functions
Attention is just one component of what are often termed executive functions. These are higher-level cognitive skills and include attention, ability to switch focus or sustain focus as needed, working memory, self-awareness and self-control, impulse control, problem-solving, planning and strategic decision making. Similar to the conductor of an orchestra, executive functions organise and orchestrate perception, motor responses, behaviour and so on. Executive functions can decline under stressful conditions and impact on effective planning, decision making and complex actions. Not all climbing occurs on a relaxed holiday in sunny Spain; changeable or uncertain conditions such as extreme cold or a sudden thunderstorm, where