Fear Of Falling Bouldering Reddit, My theory is that it’s the zooming into earth action that triggers a fear of falling.


Fear Of Falling Bouldering Reddit, There are two important concepts to understand the fear of falling in the context of rock climbing: 1. How do you overcome the fear of falling when bouldering? By learning how to fall correctly. I struggle with climbing anything higher than what my body perceives as "12 feet" - a comfortable height I don't mind falling down from the bouldering wall. This means that falls are more frequent, so avoid bouldering if falling is a big fear for you. This way you're actually pretty low to the ground but you have the chance to actually climb and use a bunch more holds. I started bouldering in Jan 2019 and recently started top roping (once a week or sometimes once every 2 weeks). There are whole books on this, and getting over fear of falling is mostly making sure that you get exposure to good falls. These days I prefer lead climbing because I got over my fear of falling and objectively it’s much safer (regarding accident injuries and overuse injuries). Reply reply RedditAutonameSucks • oh so you do have Getting over fear of falling (even in the gym) : r/bouldering r/bouldering Current search is within r/bouldering Remove r/bouldering filter and expand search to all of Reddit At the end of the day, bouldering without being able to take an unexpected fall well is dangerous. My mom has this fear and it could be land or ocean and thalassaphobia (which I have) is fear of being in or seeing deep water. cc0ck, dv0, ethut3, jpggj, 7a8t, fzuh, dv, xmf, d8grhk, nln,