Balancing the Bar–Influence of Social Behaviour on Sport Climbing Performance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participant Selection
2.2. Interviewer
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Description
3.2. Influencing Factors on Personal Development as Climbers
I have a kind of fire in me, which somehow only started to burn through this climbing. (…) I always want to challenge myself, personally as well. And I always push myself to the limit, and to my emotional limit eventually, and that is my motor.
3.3. Behaviour in Climbing—The Concept of Balanced Behaviour
3.3.1. Negative and Egoistic Behaviour
I mean, as a kid, or as a teenager, I just wanted to climb as much as I can, without consideration of losses. And I maybe did not care then that others get to climb less, because I smack in fifteen rapid fire attempts. It was rather like…I was too egoistic to say, okay, I draw the short straw, so another one gets to climb more.
(…) [The memory] that has stayed with me the most was in 2016, I was just about to begin my studies. And I really wanted to climb [that specific line] before I started my studies, because I knew that it would be extremely difficult to travel much. [I was] just in a very tense situation in many respects, I think. And I just had a day when I was at the [Cliff] with my sister and her boyfriend, I think, and two others, and I noticed that I was just radiating an unbelievable dissatisfaction, and I was just beating myself up about why I couldn’t just climb it now, that I had no interest at all in the climbing itself, but only in the goal of having climbed the [route], and to have done it, and I just noticed that… I just noticed that I didn’t want to be like that, that I probably ruined the day for others, and that I don’t want that from myself. And that I’m obviously a worse climber when I’m like that, and that [this] actually only has disadvantages. And then I decided to stop [trying the line] and wait for the next spring, although… I don’t know, it was still the beginning of October, something like that, where there would have been a lot of time [and good conditions], but I realised that I was becoming a person I didn’t want to be.
And this is where I can see the development, that everybody goes through in his younger years. When climbing plays such an important role, that it is used as benchmark for everything.
So let me put it this way, I used to be a lot more like this, and chose people, to get the best for myself out of it, to get done as much as I can and so on, and this has changed a bit.
(…) my route and I had the rockclimbing day, and there was not much else [social interaction].
(…) everybody else there knows too, that I am trying a difficult project, and they know, that I can be quite obnoxious sometimes, and pretty annoyed, and that I am very egoistic in that moment.
I observe that people are just really ambitious about the grades, and that this takes a lot of fun out of it.
Well, in general, what I don’t really like is the bad mood at the cliff. When someone is frustrated because of something, even if it’s absolutely clear that he or she will never get up the climb anyway, and then is always frustrated, and then always complains that yes, this is the very hardest 8a+ there is, and that’s not even true!
(…) it was often stressful for me because relationship stress meets climbing ambitions.
But with people who might be competitors somewhere, who now think, wow, he took a fall now, great, I’m really happy now, because he’s crapped out up there, I don’t have any more conversations with them, no.
I have the feeling that there are some people for whom it’s almost the other way round. They feel better when they know that other people are doing badly, because then they know, okay, cool, now I can take full advantage of it, so to speak, so the really competitive type [of a climber] (…).
(…) and I would like to see respect from person to person growing, also on the rock outside and also in the gym. The respect. Because somehow… human respect is somehow gone, I have the feeling.
I always go into competitions, unless it’s a World Cup, with the feeling that I want to be as good as I somehow can be on that day. And I am very focused on myself, definitely. So, there is little room for me for any kind of support for someone else. On the other hand, the others are often like that too. At least, that’s how it often was, that there was simply nothing… nothing from the others either, of course. That’s also something that I do not necessarily like about competitions.
And then you could really feel that there was a sense of competitiveness in the air, and [among the climbers] there was a very striking competitive pressure somehow, they really looked at each other’s fingers to see how the skin is, looked at what people were eating before finals and before the quali route. It was massive.
(…) then for me there was really only either I win, and that’s good, but that’s also only “good”, that’s just standard then, or I lose…
But I was just so upset that I wasn’t going to win this competition, that I saw again, that in this case my ex-girlfriend simply suffered from it, that she had to endure it. It wasn’t that I… that I was angry with her, but she was extremely impacted by my feeling of dissatisfaction.
3.3.2. Positive and Supportive Behaviour
So whenever I see someone getting close to [a successful ascent], I always tried to give them the feeling, okay, we can come here again.
(…) everyone kind of shouts Allez! Allez! And press! Come on! Go! Knüppel! Blah, blah, and I don’t hear many people. I can hear certain people, but not all of them. So, they can all shout as they want, but I don’t hear them all.
Many people say right away, hey, please don’t say anything. I always ask the climber now, if I don’t know him that well anyway, then I ask him if he needs a push somewhere.
(…) the world of others, so to speak, is also relevant, it has grown, in my eyes. I have friends, who I can watch climbing, they really put their heart and soul into it, and really want to get forward, and do their stuff well on their level! I started to see that too. At those days I never saw that someone who wanted to climb a 6 or something would then somehow try to do a pull-up. That was not visible to me at all! And meanwhile it has all become highly transparent for me.
3.3.3. Egoism and Support—Finding the Right Balance
(…) I had a bouldering project where I was fully challenged, physically, emotionally, really deeply, that was really hard. Then I was injured, then I regenerated in the boulder, then I had to be distanced, I also needed it, consciously, and then I really… that really shaped me, if you can say that, you grow as a person in experiences. That’s what I experienced for the first time, that I felt grown up when I did the boulder after six years. (…) I developed to what I am now. And I learned a lot of things [within myself and things] that are important to me, and that would never have been the case without this bouldering project. (…) And that was the most memorable cut in my life.
(…) I think in the long run it’s always healthier if no one has the feeling that they have to give in. And that’s what I tried to, yes, arrange somehow.
We supported each other completely, without talking much actually.
So, what I’ve been doing more of lately is, that I see, that others have their needs too.
But it also depends on what my role is. [If I am going to try the] project that I’ve been working on for 5 years [in the same session], then it would probably be different. Then of course I would also try to spread a good vibe, but then I would be much more tense.
I mean, sometimes it also depends on the one who is maybe closer [to the ascent]… then [this is where] you have the priority, that maybe he does it somehow.
3.3.4. Enhancing Climbing Performance through Balanced Behaviour
No, that has always influenced me. So, when I had the feeling that other people somehow weren’t up for it because they didn’t get to climb, or because they were hanging out at a cliff where there was nothing [to do] for them, then that always had a massive influence on me.
But conversely, if climbing has such a massive influence on your mood that it’s not benefiting the performance and social environment and general mood… [I] then realised that it’s actually mega inefficient to work like that, because it’s simply not beneficial for climbing performance at all.
So, what I’ve noticed in recent years, and what is a total motivation-killer for me, is when I go climbing with people and they don’t feel it and just complain about everything. So, when people around me are already so unmotivated and somehow don’t feel it, then that really gets me also down. And I don’t have any fun anymore.
With some people it just doesn’t work out. And then I can’t try things in the project the way I would if I were with other people. And then it’s no use trying the project, because then I don’t make any progress if I’m constantly thinking about something else.
3.3.5. Social Behaviour in School
We were busy with ourselves in school somehow and didn’t care about other people. What they did didn’t matter to me. They did their stuff, which was fine, we accepted that, but it wasn’t really important to us.
4. Discussion
4.1. Balancing the Bar
4.2. Extreme Misbalance–Fatal Supportive Behaviour
4.3. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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- Alter;
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- Jahre Klettererfahrung;
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- Wettkampferfahrung;
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- Hauptdisziplin (Lead, Bouldern, Speed);
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- Verteilung der Disziplinen (Momentan, Jugendzeit);
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- Verteilung von Indoor und Outdoor (Momentan, Jugendzeit);
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- Durchschnittliche Kletterzeit pro Woche und Session;
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- Kletterlevel (Bouldern und Lead).
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- Age, years;
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- Years of climbing experience;
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- Competition experience;
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- Main discipline (lead, bouldering, speed);
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- Distribution of disciplines (current, during youth);
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- Distribution of indoor and outdoor (current, during youth);
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- Average climbing time per week and session;
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- Climbing level (bouldering and lead).
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Alexander Megos | Christian Münch | Moritz Welt | Philipp Hrozek | Stephan Vogt | Thomas Dauser | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age (years) | 28 | 33 | 20 | 40 | 27 | 34 |
Climbing experience (years) | 21 | 21 | 16 | 25 | 11 | 24 |
Competition experience | International | National | National | International | International | National |
Main discipline | Lead | Lead | Lead | Bouldering | Lead | Lead |
Ratio lead/bouldering | 20/80 | 70/30 (est. *) | 75/25 | Past: 10/90. Currently: 80/20 | Outdoor: 90/10 (est. *). Indoor: 5/95 | 75/25 |
Ratio indoor/outdoor | 60/40 | 10/90 | 30/70 | 75/25 | 67/33 (est. *) | 33/67 |
Training and climbing (hours/week) | 20–30 | 20–25 | 20–25 | Up to 28 | 3–20 (est. *) | 15 |
Max. lead (max. 9c) | 9b+ | 9a | 9a+ | 9a | 9a | 9a |
Max. boulder (max. 9a) | 8c | 8b | 8c | 8b+ | 8c | 8b |
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Simen, F.; Hohmann, A.; Siener, M. Balancing the Bar–Influence of Social Behaviour on Sport Climbing Performance. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9703. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159703
Simen F, Hohmann A, Siener M. Balancing the Bar–Influence of Social Behaviour on Sport Climbing Performance. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(15):9703. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159703
Chicago/Turabian StyleSimen, Floyd, Andreas Hohmann, and Maximilian Siener. 2022. "Balancing the Bar–Influence of Social Behaviour on Sport Climbing Performance" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 15: 9703. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159703
APA StyleSimen, F., Hohmann, A., & Siener, M. (2022). Balancing the Bar–Influence of Social Behaviour on Sport Climbing Performance. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(15), 9703. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159703