Outdoor Climbing vs. Indoor Climbing and Why it Doesn't Matter
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mojagear.com/journal/
Interested to hear viewpoints on this blog post. I personally found it poorly written and self centered. Furthermore, it concerned me that it seemed to imply indoor climbers shouldn't be bothered by outdoor ethics. Curious if I am reacting too harshly to this and what others think. |
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I'm having trouble finding the point of that post... |
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Kelly P wrote:Furthermore, it concerned me that it seemed to imply indoor climbers shouldn't be bothered by outdoor ethics. Curious if I am reacting too harshly to this and what others think.I didn't get that from the article. Thought it was a whole lotta noise about nothing, though. |
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ethics are important. gym climbing is definitely fun, but it is not the pure experience that made humans climb to begin with... |
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this has nothing to do with ethics. he's just saying stop giving a shit what other people do with their time. |
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Wow, he used many, many words to say absolutely nothing. He trotted out lots of stereotypes, admitted they were stereotypes but defended them "for the purpose of this piece" and then never got around to any purpose whatsoever. |
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Outdoor climbing is climbing, gym and sport climbing is merely ascending. |
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Guy should ask for the $100K back that it took to educate him. |
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Knowing the writer personally, I think his point is fairly straightforward: it really doesn't matter whether you prefer crushing plastic or granite, as long as you're being genuine with yourself and others. Climbing is a gift ... to each their own. |
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Sander DiAngelis wrote:Knowing the writer personally, I think his point is fairly straightforward: it really doesn't matter whether you prefer crushing plastic or granite, as long as you're being genuine with yourself and others. Climbing is a gift ... to each their own.Lol sounds like you two share the same bong. This is gold. derpy blog wrote:It is my strong opinion that Climbing has evolved past the boundaries of the Rocky Mountains and Sierra NevadasI was totally unaware that climbing occurred anywhere outside these two areas of the western united states. What an informative blog post. |
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^^^THat was funny! |
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Brad M wrote: This is gold. I was totally unaware that climbing occurred anywhere outside these two areas of the western united states. What an informative blog post.I noticed that when I read it also. Has this guy ever actually left the west coast? And, Sander Diangelis, if that was his point why didn't he write that? Instead, he's got 500 words of drivel, stereotypes, incomplete thoughts, and rationalizations, without a point. The first trick to writing well is having a goal. A specific goal, not "I want to write about indoor and outdoor climbing." This is usually best expressed as "I want the reader to understand __________." Everyone who writes has written something unfocused, undirected and pointless. But most of us don't publish it on the internet for others to read. To the OP, let this one go. The guy had no point, so there's no point in responding to it. |
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Haha yes you guys are right. I only noticed it because it was being spread around the web and discussed as though it was some piece of literary gold! I thought it was poorly written and was unaware climbing required capitalization in every sentence. Learn something new everyday :) |
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