This week’s episode is special.
It’s from our first Finding Mastery “Live” recorded at the USC Performance Science Institute.
Seattle Seahawks head coach, Pete Carroll, USC Executive Director for Entrepreneurial Studies, David Belasco, and I created the institute to teach, train, and research the science, best practices, and applied processes for a high performing mindset in any domain.
That’s our mission.
I can't tell you how excited I am for what we're building - it's got all the makings for something very special for the next generation of doers and thinkers.
The guest for this first Finding Mastery live is Alex Honnold, someone I’ve wanted to talk to for a very long time.
Alex, in my mind, is one of the most compelling athletes in sport right now.
Alex is a professional adventure rock climber whose audacious free-solo ascents of America’s biggest cliffs have made him one of the most recognized and followed climbers in the world.
If you're not familiar with free solo climbing, it's literally climbing without using any ropes and harnesses or any protective equipment, relying entirely on the climbers ability, which is just his or her mind, their hands, their feet, in the most ancient of ways and their connection with the mountain.
That's it.
There’s no support net, there's nothing. It is complete commitment to the connection between the mind, their body, their craft, and the environment
Alex’s mind is extraordinary. His depth of presence, his curiosity, his confidence, his ability to be calm and to think clearly - they all just jumped out in this conversation
All of those are likely hallmarks of why he's so different than so many other physically talented climbers.
I had a sense of how he thought because I spend so much time working to understand the minds of people that do these types of things but I had never spent time with Alex prior to this.
It was just a treat to see his mind unfold in this conversation.
Alex recently became the first person to free solo climb El Capitan in Yosemite, the most iconic wall in the world.
To Alex this project was just a little bit bigger, a little bit harder, than he's attempted in the past and in his words, it was attainable.
That’s something to consider for when people are pushing the boundaries of human performance and human limits.
Although it looks crazy or reckless to many of us, it is just an incremental step in the direction of growth for them.
You've likely heard me talking about ways to dissolve pressure and not just perform with it.
One way Alex has done that is by having this incredible balance between being mission minded (meaning why and what he's doing in his life) without compromising his ability to think in the present moment, to lock in, and be present with whatever's he’s doing.
The mix between being mission minded and also locking into the present that's phenomenal.
Alex is a world-class talent and I hope this conversation gives you some perspective on why he’s able to do what he does.
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