World's Greatest Climber: If Had One Last Climb It Would Be...
Alex Honnold has climbed the world's tallest buildings and most dangerous rock faces without a rope, yet the public sees him as a fearless anomaly — a man whose brain simply doesn't process risk the way ours do. But is that really true? Honnold insists he's just a middle-class suburban kid who spent 20 years scared, living in a van on $300 a month, grinding away at a craft most people thought would never pay. The tension: is greatness born or built? And what does his journey reveal about the risks we all take — the ones we choose, and the ones we don't even see?
Ключевые выводы
Honnold's brain scans show reduced amygdala response to scary images — but not because he lacks fear. After 20 years of climbing 5 days a week, his brain has simply adapted through exposure. The takeaway: neuroplasticity means anyone can rewire their fear response through deliberate, repeated practice.
Free soloing looks riskier than it is. Honnold's scariest moments have come with a rope on, pushing into unknown terrain in Antarctica. When soloing, he stays within a practiced margin. Most people take far more unconscious risk — drunk driving, sedentary lifestyles, thoughtless choices — than he does climbing.
Honnold lived in a van for 10 years on a couple hundred dollars a month, doing work for free, never optimizing for money. The compounding effect of doing great work eventually created massive financial and career returns — but only after a decade of near-zero income.
He breaks impossible goals into tiny pieces. Taipei 101 wasn't one climb — it was dozens of segments, each with different holds, technique, and risk. By mastering each section individually, the impossible became doable. The lesson applies far beyond climbing.
Honnold's mother was a perfectionist who demanded high performance; his father was depressed and emotionally distant. The household was unemotional, affection conditional. He now deliberately rejects perfectionism in favor of «good enough» and intentional risk-taking — a direct counter to his upbringing.
Вкратце
Alex Honnold's career proves that mastery isn't about fearlessness or genetic gifts — it's about intentionally choosing your risks, doing hard things repeatedly, and letting value compound over decades. The real danger isn't free soloing; it's sleepwalking through life taking risks you never chose.
The Myth of the Fearless Brain
Honnold's amygdala isn't broken — it's trained through 20 years of exposure therapy.
The fMRI scene in Free Solo went viral: Alex Honnold's brain, when shown frightening images, lit up far less than a control subject's. The conclusion many drew? He doesn't experience fear. Honnold hates this narrative. «I actually hate all the brain stuff because people always put me in this box. They're like, 'Well, you're different.' And I'm like, 'Well, not really.'» He's a middle-class suburban kid. No one in his family is athletic. But after 20 years of climbing 5 days a week — being «really freaking scared» — his brain responds differently than the average person's.
The study wasn't measuring real fear. Honnold was inside a sealed metal tube, totally safe, looking at black-and-white photos. «You're looking at pictures. You're like, who cares? I'm totally safe.» A control subject's brain reacts to images of danger; Honnold's doesn't, because he's spent two decades in actual danger. The real takeaway, he insists: «I have an amygdala and it works.» The inspiring conclusion: neuroplasticity is real. Monks' brains look different in fMRIs too. After years of deliberate practice, anyone can rewire their fear response.
«You're going to freaking die either way, so choose the things that you care about.»
Honnold on intentional risk-taking versus the unconscious dangers of ordinary life.
“People look at my life and they're like, 'Well, you're crazy. You're such a risk taker.' Well, at least I'm taking the risks that I'm choosing because think of all the people that like go out partying every weekend and they get buzzed and they drive home. And even sedentary people who are like, 'Well, I don't take risk. I stay home and I play video games.' No, you're at a much higher risk of heart disease. Like, they're taking all kinds of risk that they're not actually choosing to take and you're still going to freaking die either way. So, you might as well take smart, calculated risks and do all the things that you want to do and at least die happy when you go.”
The Van Years: Living on $300 a Month
How to Climb the Impossible: Breaking Down Taipei 101
Honnold's method: scout every segment, practice with ropes, turn one giant problem into dozens of small ones.
Scout the Building September 2024: Honnold climbed Taipei 101 with ropes to check feasibility, test holds, and shoot marketing material. He took notes on his phone for every transition and surface type.
Break It Into Segments The bottom is a low-angle slab. Then two coin-shaped features. Eight overhanging dragon corners. Balconies near the top. Each segment requires different technique and grip strength.
Practice Each Piece Climbed every section with protection to learn the moves. Noted which holds were secure, which were slippery, where to place hands and feet. Built muscle memory for each transition.
Manage Stamina Expected the climb to take 90–120 minutes. Trained to ensure he'd have energy reserves. «I've done hard exercise for more than 24 hours. I know I have a much deeper reserve than that.»
Execute Live on Netflix Climbed the southeast arête in morning light for better filming. Used a security camera bolted to the wall as a critical hold. Completed the climb with a 10-second broadcast delay.
The Numbers Behind the Climb
Key stats from Honnold's career, training, and the Taipei 101 ascent.
The Real Risk: Unconscious Choices
Most people take huge risks they never chose — drunk driving, sedentary lifestyles, thoughtless decisions.
The Real Risk: Unconscious Choices
Honnold's core thesis on risk: «People look at my life and they're like, 'Well, you're crazy. You're such a risk taker.' Well, at least I'm taking the risks that I'm choosing.» He argues that partying, drinking and driving, or living a sedentary life (high heart disease risk) are far less intentional — and often more dangerous — than his meticulously practiced climbs. «You're still going to freaking die either way. So, you might as well take smart, calculated risks and do all the things that you want to do and at least die happy when you go.»
Sanni's Letter: What She Sees in Alex
Honnold's wife wrote him a letter explaining his unique form of love: paying attention.
Sanni Honnold knows her husband hates emotional vulnerability — the letter opens, «Obviously, this is your worst nightmare.» But she wanted to articulate what others miss. Alex once told her about a woman in a book who was «less affected by emotions than most people» — and everyone tried to convince her she was suppressing feelings. Alex said, «Everyone wants to believe that I'm burying all these things, these feelings deep inside, but I'm just not.» Sanni laughed: «I know you're dead inside.»
But she's come to see something else. «Filling the space that would normally be taken up by all these feelings is the ability to truly see things. You move through the world like a hawk while the rest of us are lost in thought.» As a climber, he sees the way up a rock face. As a father, he notices his daughters' quiet desires and the chores that need doing. As a friend, he sees raw potential in everyone. «Nothing goes unnoticed. Neither the strengths nor the weaknesses… But that's also because you see us. And paying attention is love.»
She lists what she sees in return: him rushing down trails to make dinner with the family, flying red-eyes to be home a day sooner, cramming gym sessions so she has time for her workout, adjusting his training schedule for foundation work. «I know it's not easy, but I see it and I appreciate it. We love you as you are, Alex. Not overly emotional, but present, committed, and always seeing what others miss.»
Neuroplasticity and the Willpower Muscle
The Illusion of Overnight Success
People see Free Solo and think Honnold just walked up and did it. They miss the 9 years before that.
If He Had One Week Left to Live
Honnold's ultimate unfinished goal: free solo the Yosemite Triple in one day.
If Alex Honnold had one week to live and could do one last climb — assuming he's sufficiently prepared — he'd attempt the free solo triple: El Capitan, Half Dome, and Mount Watkins, all in a single day. He and Tommy Caldwell have free climbed the triple together with ropes. Honnold has soloed the triple (all three walls, with ropes, alone) in 18–19 hours. He's free soloed Half Dome and El Cap individually. But no one has ever free soloed all three in one day.
«It would be like a totally next generation achievement,» he says. It's the kind of goal an 18-year-old with higher skill than Honnold has now would pursue if they were «trying to make it as a professional climber nowadays.» It's a North Star — audacious, dangerous, and probably decades away from being attempted. But it's on his mental list. And knowing Honnold, he's already broken it into pieces.
Люди
Глоссарий
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