#2: Why Would Anyone climb 3,000 feet without a rope?
+ a badass septuagenarian + a love/hate relationship with heroic stories
I have a big birthday next month, and was thinking Meh. Everything will be closed that day, everybody will be away, why bother organising anything.
Then I saw this story:

The septuagenarian
For her 70th birthday, Dierdre Wolownick decided to climb El Capitรกn in Yosemite National Park, for the second time. She had already done it in 2017, through a different route, becoming the oldest woman to ever scale what she calls the โocean of graniteโ.
Wolownick is, also, the mother of superstar rock climber Alex Honnold. She says she initially took up climbing in her 60s to relate better to her son. At the same time, she seems to have made climbing Her Thing1:
โI was just a lumpy old middle age woman completely taken with jobs and chores. I was scared, too, and sometimes you need a little help to do something totally new and alien to you. But after a month or two I had had enough conversations with myself and so I said, OK, today, youโre not going home after work. Youโre going to go straight to the climbing gym. And I did.โ ยช
The outlier
The year that his mum first climbed El Capitรกn, Alex Honnold tackled the 3,000-feet southwest face of the same monolith, without a rope. Any minor mistake meant he would fall and die.
The 2018 Oscar-winning film Free Solo documents his quest. Itโs a beautiful, gripping film, even if you donโt know the first thing about climbing:
[SPOILER ALERT: Honnold did not fall and is the first and only person whoโs ever free solo-ed El Capitรกn. Below is a photo of him and his pregnant wife, Sanni McCandless Honnold, in Sardinia five weeks ago:]
Now. Why Would Anyone climb โthe most impressive wall on earthโ without any safety gear?
First off, Honnoldโs exceptional brain doesnโt compute fear2 like yours and mine do. Beyond that, here are Honnoldโs self-declared motivators, both intrinsic and extrinsic:
Enjoyment
โWhy does anyone have a hobby or passion? Itโs because I find meaning and fulfillment in it, itโs beautiful, and I enjoy it. You could also say that my brain chemistry is addicted to the feeling [โฆ] but the overarching thing is that I love the feeling of danglingโ ^
Excellence
โIn some way the drive is like curiosity, the explorerโs heart, wanting to see whatโs around the corner. And part of it is being a perfectionist. If Iโm gonna do something, I want to do it well.โ ^
โThis is your path and you will pursue it with excellence. You face your fear because your goal demands it. That is the warrior spirit.โ *
โThere is pressure, but itโs mostly internal. Iโve basically devoted my life to climbing, and I donโt want to put in all this effort and still suck at it. That would be lame.โ ^
โYou know, like, nobody achieves anything great because theyโre happy and cosy.โ *
An exacting upbringing
โMy mumโs favourite sayings are: โpresque ne compte pasโ [in French], โalmost doesnโt countโ, or โgood enough isnโtโ. No matter how well I ever do at anything, itโs not that good. The bottomless pit of self-loathing. I mean, thatโs definitely the motivation for some solo-ing.โ *
โItโs, like, always about excellence and perfection. And I was certainly raised that way, you know, that you need to perform.โ *
Also, shyness
[As a child] โI was doing a lot of solo-ing, just a lot of climbing by myself, just because I didnโt know anybody and I didnโt want to talk to anybody.โ *
What would I do if my children took up deadly hobbies? (So far I have toddlers who climb on the dining table to grab sharp objects, and a 4-year-old who fancies joining a group of pyrotechnic demon-dancers.)
Of course, Iโd like to think Iโd respect, nay embrace their passion like Wolownick does:
โI think when heโs free solo-ing is when he feels most alive, mostโฆ everything. How can you even think about taking that away from somebody?โ *
And OF COURSE, Iโd be super chill about it all, let the kidsโ intrinsic motivation lead the show, and they would never fall into a bottomless pit of self-loathing! EASY-PEASY!
Being intentional
I have a love/hate relationship with tales of extraordinary athletic achievements. At first glance, I find them alienating, hence de-motivating. But I also like how stories of outliers push me to examine my own choices.
Thereโs the initial gut reaction: โthatโs insane/selfish/stupidโ; โI would leave you if you did thatโ; โWarrior Spirit, LOLโ โjudgments I can be prompt to spit out.
If I stop here though, I canโt see what I might share, deep down, with people like Honnold. I keep potential realisations, and growth, at bay.
Curiosity? Adult demands for โexcellenceโ? That I know. Honnoldโs elation as he reaches the summit, grinning: โSo delighted. So delightedโ? Thatโs intrinsic gold.
If I take a deep breath, I also notice that I envy Honnold. Not his abilities, but his freedom, his drive, his โgive-no-shitsโ (his wifeโs words) certainty.
As he puts it:
โI wonder if people that hate on risk-taking are as intentional in their choices as I am. How many people are choosing to live in a way that best suits their values and best fulfils them?โ ^
Touchรฉ.
More than a supporting cast
The most relatable part of Free Solo, to me, is the nerve-racking experience of pretty much everyone around Honnold: the filming crew, his fellow climbers, his then-girlfriend McCandless, his mother.
I do not want to romanticise the lives of those gnawing at their nails on the sidelines of heroic feats, especially women in the shadow of manly exploits. But I wouldnโt mind getting a taste of the life-affirming clarity that seems to ripple around Honnoldโs close circle.
I crave some of McCandlessโ deliberateness. While Free Solo sometimes portrays her as an amateur thorn in Honnoldโs side, she appears to have found Her Thing, too:
โSomewhere deep down I was realizing the pain of forever being seen simply as an extension of my significant other. [โฆ] Slowly, I recognized that my frustration might be coming from a lack of confidence that I would find my own way.โ ยบ
โWe had to discuss not only the prospect of death, but what we each needed to truly feel alive.โ ยบ
I will leave you with Wolownickโs flavour of give-no-shits attitude, before I go think about what I really want to do on my birthday:
โLook, thereโs somebody telling you every step of your life what to eat, what to wear, that you canโt sleep without this drug, and itโs all nonsense. You can decide for yourself what you think youโre capable of.โ ยช
The quotes marked with * come from Free Solo, which is available to stream on Disney+ (at least where I live).
Those marked with ยช come from Wolownickโs 2021 Q&A with the New York Times.
Those marked with ^ come from this 2015 National Geographic interview with Honnold.
Those marked with ยบ come from this 2021 essay by McCandless in Outside magazine.
I recommend this 2016 Nautilus article about Alex Honnoldโs brain, where J.B. McKinnon writes: โitโs a fair bet that Honnoldโs threat-response circuitry started out on the cool end of the spectrumโwhich would explain why his younger self saw a powerful appeal, rather than lethal danger, in the photographs of his ropeless climbing heroes. At least as important as the brain that Honnold was born with, however, is the one that he has wired for himself through thousands of hours of risk-taking.โ
This is Alex's mom. :-) Loved your article. I now have a brand-new Substack presence. Only one article so far, & an About page. Check it out -- it looks like we have lots to talk about!
Wow, this is such an inspiring article! I loved Free Solo too, but had no idea his mom did this (twice!) Also, you make me laugh..."EASY PEASY!" lol!! These are some excellent quotes; I wouldn't have though of it but yes, Alex Honnold is an excellent study in motivation.