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Welcome to the Iron Jungle

  • Writer: Noah Hardwick
    Noah Hardwick
  • 6 days ago
  • 3 min read

How’s it going fam!? Here at Elite Performance Climbing, I want to start things off right by laying a solid foundation that we can build a mighty fortress upon. Time for climbers is a precious commodity. Many of us often feel overwhelmed while trying to juggle work, school, extracurriculars, climbing, training, and everything else life throws at us, which is a major bummer wave for anyone trying to become an elite athlete. At EPC we have a saying: “We Build Savages,” but that’s hard to do with the limited time athletes have available, so we have to be VERY intentional. 


Intentionality is a very powerful tool. It saves you time, effort and can be harnessed in life-changing ways to create incredible outcomes. By harnessing the power of intention, you will see improvements not only in your climbing, but also in your performance training. That's where I come in. This sacred space, The Iron Jungle, is where we pair science and intention to create very specific outcomes. The difference between good, great and elite performance is all rooted in the use of intention. Let’s take a look at three climbers using intentionality in varying degrees of application.


Biff is a good climber and rad dude. He’s on the climbing team and competes well, but he never breaks into the top half of the leaderboard. He’s there for a good time, is more laid back, and doesn't take his performance training very seriously. (Your gym’s Biff is usually the one making fart jokes during the core training part of the session.) He works on his climbing projects for a week or two before getting them, but they look good enough for his Instagram.  


George is a great climber and also a rad dude. He’s been climbing for about five years and is one of the strongest at the gym. He takes his training seriously and is doing programs he found on a popular climber’s TikTok/Instagram as well as what his climbing coach has him do. He places Top 10 in the comps he enters and can climb almost everything in the gym


Marty is an elite climber and is, allegedly, also a very rad dude. Marty has only been climbing three years, but he’s part of a strong group, sometimes traveling an hour to train. His mobility routine was created specifically for him by his climbing performance trainer, and he does it while the rest of the crew does their general warmup before sessions. His time in the weight room is taken seriously, too. Sure, he still jokes around between sets, but he’s there to work hard and improve. Even the way he lifts is different, concentrating hard and ensuring slow controlled movements for every exercise. His performance trainer updates his plan as he continually improves week by week. Marty also doesn’t seem to really ever get injured because he has a recovery process he does after every sesh and on his rest days. Marty podiums most competitions he enters and just flashed my project for his warm up. 


Alright fam, which climber do you think is being most intentional in their training approach? Pretty obvious right? All three climbers compete, train, and are physically strong. What differentiates these climbers is their use of intention to elicit desired outcomes. Biff is intentional about crop dusting the weight room, but not much else, and it shows in his performance outcomes during comps and projecting. George is applying intentionality by doing extra training, but because it’s not designed specific to him, and more for general populations, he’s getting general results. Marty on the other hand, is very intentional with every aspect of his training, insomuch that he’s sought experts to create plans specifically for him and his body. Marty’s specificity in his approach was born from application of intention, and it has yielded some pretty radical results.


How intentional are you being with your training approach?



 
 
 

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