TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

World's Greatest Climber: If I Had One Last Climb It Would Be...

1h 37m 17s24,067 mots3,445 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

It drives me crazy that nobody else

0:01

thinks about risk in this way. People

0:03

look at my life and they're like, "Well,

0:04

you're crazy. You're such a risk taker."

0:06

Well, at least I'm taking the risks that

0:08

I'm choosing because think of all the

0:09

people that like go out partying every

0:11

weekend and they get buzzed and they

0:12

drive home. And even sedendary people

0:14

who are like, "Well, I don't take risk.

0:15

I stay home and I play video games." No,

0:17

you're at a much higher risk of heart

0:18

disease. Like, they're taking all kinds

0:19

of risk that they're not actually

0:21

choosing to take and you're still going

0:22

to freaking die either way. So, you

0:24

might as well take smart, calculated

0:25

risks and do all the things that you

0:27

want to do and at least die happy when

0:28

you go. He's done it. Alice Honold has

0:31

made history again, scaling one of the

0:32

world's tallest skyscrapers. [music]

0:34

>> But the conclusion that a lot of people

0:36

have arrived at is that you don't

0:37

experience fear because when they look

0:39

at these two brain scans, your amydala

0:40

is lighting up less when you're shown

0:42

scary images. I I actually hate all the

0:44

brain stuff because people always put me

0:45

in this box. They're like, "Well, you're

0:46

different." And I'm like, "Well, not

0:47

really. Like, I'm a middle class

0:49

suburban kid. Nobody in my family is

0:50

athletic. I just after [music] 20 years

0:52

of climbing 5 days a week and being

0:53

really freaking scared, I respond

0:54

differently than an average person." And

0:56

there was tons of emotional turmoil

0:57

throughout it. Periods where you're just

0:59

like I'm trying so hard and I'm just

1:00

like not as good as I want to be. You

1:02

know, I was like living in a car. I had

1:03

like a couple hundred bucks a month for

1:04

10 years. Like that's challenging. But

1:06

you just can't master a craft overnight.

1:08

I guess that's what people don't see.

1:10

And so how do you create the conditions

1:12

to out persist other people? And then in

1:14

all your career, when is the moment

1:15

where you were most scared?

1:16

>> On an expedition to Antarctica. I kept

1:18

hoping that it's going to get better and

1:19

it just kept getting [music] worse. Like

1:20

I could die.

1:21

>> Do you have a conversation with your

1:22

partner before you go and do something

1:24

like this? because she wrote a letter.

1:25

>> Oh gosh.

1:26

>> Obviously, this is your worst nightmare,

1:28

she said. But we all have to do scary

1:30

things sometimes, Alex.

1:34

>> Guys, I've got a quick favor to ask you.

1:36

We're approaching a significant

1:38

subscriber milestone on this show, and

1:40

roughly 69% of you that listen and love

1:42

this show haven't yet subscribed for

1:44

whatever reason. If there was ever a

1:46

time for you to do us a favor, if we've

1:48

ever done anything for you, given you

1:50

value in any way, it is simply hitting

1:52

that subscribe button. and it means

1:53

[clears throat] so much to myself but

1:54

also to my team because when we hit

1:55

these milestones we go away as a team

1:57

and celebrate and it's the thing the

1:58

simple free easy thing you can do to

2:00

help make this show a little bit better

2:02

every single week. So that's a favor I

2:04

would ask you and um if you do

2:06

[clears throat] hit the subscribe button

2:07

I won't let you down and we'll continue

2:09

to find small ways to make this whole

2:11

production better. Thank you so much for

2:13

being part of this journey. Means the

2:14

world. And uh yeah, let's do this.

2:20

[music]

2:20

Alex to understand you. I think from

2:24

everything I've learned about you, from

2:25

the research I've done, from speaking to

2:28

your wife, your agent, everybody I could

2:30

speak to, I think to understand your

2:33

context, we first need to understand the

2:36

circumstances in which you were raised

2:37

and the childhood you had because it

2:38

seems to be I mean for all of us there's

2:40

like fingerprints left on us that define

2:43

the anomaly um that many of us become

2:46

including yourself. So what do I need to

2:48

know? What does the viewer need to know

2:49

about the early context?

2:50

>> I mean, how deep do you want to go? I

2:52

need get a sofa. I need to reply.

2:54

[laughter] Like, all right. Uh, but

2:57

yeah, certainly there's a there's an

2:58

imprint from my parents, my upbringing.

3:00

I mean, they had a a very fraught

3:01

relationship. They eventually got

3:03

divorced, but they stayed together for

3:04

the kids and it was a whole like, you

3:05

know, say a tense home life because

3:07

neither of them really liked each other.

3:09

And then my mom is very driven, very,

3:13

you know, high performing. And then my

3:14

dad was hard to say. I mean, I think my

3:16

dad was deeply depressed basically the

3:17

whole time I knew him cuz he was in this

3:19

relation. You know, it's hard to tell.

3:20

He wasn't living his best life. And then

3:22

sadly after they got divorced, he was he

3:24

was much happier, but then he died. And

3:25

so then never really got to see uh never

3:28

really got to see him blossom that much.

3:30

>> And your mother's high performing. And

3:32

did did she sort of implicitly demand

3:34

that of you in any way?

3:35

>> Yeah, I mean my mother speaks like seven

3:37

or eight languages. She like plays every

3:38

instrument. It's like kind of crazy.

3:39

She's very artistically minded in that

3:42

way, like you know, the arts and

3:44

classical sense. But um yeah, she I mean

3:46

she wanted us to do all those things

3:47

too. I'm a deep disappointment in that

3:49

regard.

3:51

>> There was a phrase that I saw when I was

3:53

watching the documentary that your your

3:54

mother would continually say which I

3:56

think translates to something like not

3:57

good enough like pressing a ka like

4:00

almost like almost doesn't count. It's

4:03

funny because I feel like uh a lot of my

4:05

adult life now one of my sort of go-to

4:07

sayings is you know don't let perfect be

4:09

the enemy of good. I'm really into like

4:11

good enough. Like it's better to like

4:12

try. It's better to do something, you

4:14

know, it's better to fail quickly and

4:16

learn and keep moving forward than to

4:18

not try something. Like basically, I

4:19

don't want to be crippled by

4:20

perfectionism. Sort of like my mom is

4:22

very much a perfectionist, you know,

4:23

like if you can't do it right, don't do

4:25

it. I'm sort of like I think it's better

4:27

to try and learn and improve,

4:29

>> but she's accomplished a lot of things

4:30

with that approach.

4:31

>> Yeah, she Yeah, she has for sure.

4:33

>> What about emotions? This is something

4:34

you I've had heard you sort of talked

4:36

about a lot is in that environment where

4:38

your mother and father aren't getting

4:40

along well. I think I I heard you say

4:41

that your you hadn't seen your father

4:43

really happy before he'd passed away.

4:45

>> Yeah.

4:46

>> Was it an emotional household in terms

4:48

of affection?

4:49

>> No, it was a very unemotional household.

4:51

That said though, you know, it was a

4:52

safe, relatively happy household. Like

4:54

it was it was fine, you know, and and I

4:55

was close to a lot of my extended

4:56

family. And so I had a really good

4:57

relation with my grandparents and some

4:59

my aunts and uncles. And so I mean I

5:01

basically would have characterized it as

5:02

a totally happy family life until I

5:04

became older and started seeing other

5:06

people's families more and was kind of

5:07

like, "Oh, this seems even happier." You

5:08

know what I mean? It's like basically

5:10

really good until you see what what else

5:12

it can be and then you're like this

5:13

seems even better.

5:15

>> And your mom wasn't ever affectionate.

5:17

>> You know, it always feels slightly

5:19

conditional, you know, where it's like

5:21

uh you know, she cares if you be you

5:24

know, if you perform well, like if you

5:25

do well, like if you're a good kid or

5:27

whatever, you know what I mean?

5:28

>> Where where did climbing come into your

5:30

life? Cuz I've got some I have found

5:31

some photos of you climbing and you look

5:33

your like with your sister, I believe.

5:34

Here we go. This one here.

5:36

>> Yeah. Classic. How old have you been?

5:38

>> I don't know. I mean, I don't know, like

5:40

six or something or eight. It's hard for

DÉBLOQUER PLUS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement pour accéder aux fonctionnalités premium

VISUALISEUR INTERACTIF

Regardez la vidéo avec des sous-titres synchronisés, une superposition réglable et un contrôle total de la lecture.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

RÉSUMÉ IA

Obtenez un résumé instantané généré par l'IA du contenu de la vidéo, des points clés et des principaux enseignements.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TRADUIRE

Traduisez la transcription dans plus de 100 langues en un seul clic. Téléchargez dans n'importe quel format.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

CARTE MENTALE

Visualisez la transcription sous forme de carte mentale interactive. Comprenez la structure en un coup d'œil.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

DISCUTER AVEC LA TRANSCRIPTION

Posez des questions sur le contenu de la vidéo. Obtenez des réponses alimentées par l'IA directement à partir de la transcription.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TIREZ LE MEILLEUR PARTI DE VOS TRANSCRIPTIONS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et débloquez la visionneuse interactive, les résumés IA, les traductions, les cartes mentales, et plus encore. Aucune carte de crédit requise.