I had a ton of fun making this one! Personally I've been so focused working on "being good" that #2 helped me remember there's more. As the channel keeps on growing the opportunities of making cool stuff increases! I really appreciate all of you'r support, let's catch up to Magnus! I bet he's shaking 🤣
Japanese climbers just have such profound understanding of the journey to the top, it's really interesting what we can learn from them when chasing progression as a climber
This is exactly what I though when I came here for the first time, I changed my mental and the rest followed. The best thing is this is achievable for anyone, anywhere and it's free! The downside is that its not as clear but I think that's why tip #1 is so key
@@scottwangkl8882 it's characteristic of their culture really, it's the same with everything else not just climbing. Their culture is just amazing, but has downsides too. Being so success oriented means that if you do not succeed you're not all that happy 😊 many kids and even adults struggle with thoughts they're not "good enough". Remember that one time the bpump guy said "I really want to stop" but he couldn't before finishing the boulder? But I love Japan, did for years and always will. I love this strive to perfection about their culture
Yeah! That was hayato 😂 I don't know if everyone is like that but I think there is a tendency to be that way. Also anyone who is in the top % at anything has basically had to struggle to get there, everyone is talented but at the end of the day hard work, effective planning and training, and showing up is what makes the difference
Great video! It's interesting that all of the advice was mostly about the high level strategy of climbing. I wonder if they have any advice for beginners trying to progress as quickly as possible, or remedies for common mistakes that they see. They also mentioned projecting limit boulders to improve. I wonder if they have any other recommendations. Specifically stuff like volume days at your flash level, drills on easier climbs, and training (fingerboard, board climbing, weights, campusing).
Thanks Aidan! Yeah we'll make more videos answering those questions, personally I think this high level stuff is the most important because it gives each person the tools to assess themselves and other friends.
@@aidanuy I believe it applies to everyone. Scale it to your current struggles, and it will work just fine. They said it's most important to set your goals, so your goal doesn't have to be to send v17. It can be to learn 7a slabs or technical boulders, all advices should work just as good I believe 🐢
10:15 I think this is the most important and most of all practical tip. Seeing your body move you will realize how different it looks from the way you thought you move 😂. I have never seen more people film theire climb’s then in B Pump. Like here in Europe i have never seen it.
100%!!! The image we have of ourselves vs reality is huge and you can only really learn once you leave your own perspective and see it from the outside. It was a game changer for me. I've been told that in korea it's even worse, mostly because everyone uploads to insta
@@vox4293 indeed. I film myself a lot tho and it helps a ton. But I do feel kinda like I'm a narcissist or whatever in ppls eyes, even tho I never posted anything and just use it for training 😂 it's super helpful
I used to be the same way 😅 I thought they all just wanted Instagram clout but now I see I was just not taking advantage of all the tools at my disposal
Really loving the content you're putting out! Such great insight, and incredibly helpful! I'm heading to Tokyo in a few days. Is B-Pump foreigner friendly? Would love to visit, but wondering how easy it is to get by as an English speaker. Thanks!
Thanks!! I work at the Akihabara branch (Bpump Tokyo) and there is a ton of english speaking staff. Personally I would say it's the most foreign friendly one. I'm actually making a guide of the gym but it's not gonna be done in time for you 🥲
I had a ton of fun making this one! Personally I've been so focused working on "being good" that #2 helped me remember there's more. As the channel keeps on growing the opportunities of making cool stuff increases! I really appreciate all of you'r support, let's catch up to Magnus! I bet he's shaking 🤣
@@CrispyCrimpsClimbing he's terrified mate 🫣 😂 you will one day if you decide to keep going 😎
Japanese climbers just have such profound understanding of the journey to the top, it's really interesting what we can learn from them when chasing progression as a climber
This is exactly what I though when I came here for the first time, I changed my mental and the rest followed. The best thing is this is achievable for anyone, anywhere and it's free! The downside is that its not as clear but I think that's why tip #1 is so key
@@scottwangkl8882 it's characteristic of their culture really, it's the same with everything else not just climbing. Their culture is just amazing, but has downsides too. Being so success oriented means that if you do not succeed you're not all that happy 😊 many kids and even adults struggle with thoughts they're not "good enough". Remember that one time the bpump guy said "I really want to stop" but he couldn't before finishing the boulder? But I love Japan, did for years and always will. I love this strive to perfection about their culture
Yeah! That was hayato 😂 I don't know if everyone is like that but I think there is a tendency to be that way. Also anyone who is in the top % at anything has basically had to struggle to get there, everyone is talented but at the end of the day hard work, effective planning and training, and showing up is what makes the difference
this is great advice. love these dudes
tell them yourself!! insta in description
Such great advice! I love the focus on getting good not just getting strong 👍🏻👍🏻 Thanks for interviewing Hayato and Asahi to bring us these tips!
Thanks August!!
Really great tipps :)
Great video! It's interesting that all of the advice was mostly about the high level strategy of climbing. I wonder if they have any advice for beginners trying to progress as quickly as possible, or remedies for common mistakes that they see.
They also mentioned projecting limit boulders to improve. I wonder if they have any other recommendations. Specifically stuff like volume days at your flash level, drills on easier climbs, and training (fingerboard, board climbing, weights, campusing).
Thanks Aidan! Yeah we'll make more videos answering those questions, personally I think this high level stuff is the most important because it gives each person the tools to assess themselves and other friends.
@@aidanuy I believe it applies to everyone. Scale it to your current struggles, and it will work just fine. They said it's most important to set your goals, so your goal doesn't have to be to send v17. It can be to learn 7a slabs or technical boulders, all advices should work just as good I believe 🐢
Exactly!!!
10:15 I think this is the most important and most of all practical tip. Seeing your body move you will realize how different it looks from the way you thought you move 😂. I have never seen more people film theire climb’s then in B Pump. Like here in Europe i have never seen it.
100%!!! The image we have of ourselves vs reality is huge and you can only really learn once you leave your own perspective and see it from the outside. It was a game changer for me.
I've been told that in korea it's even worse, mostly because everyone uploads to insta
@@vox4293 indeed. I film myself a lot tho and it helps a ton. But I do feel kinda like I'm a narcissist or whatever in ppls eyes, even tho I never posted anything and just use it for training 😂 it's super helpful
I used to be the same way 😅 I thought they all just wanted Instagram clout but now I see I was just not taking advantage of all the tools at my disposal
Really loving the content you're putting out! Such great insight, and incredibly helpful! I'm heading to Tokyo in a few days. Is B-Pump foreigner friendly? Would love to visit, but wondering how easy it is to get by as an English speaker. Thanks!
Thanks!! I work at the Akihabara branch (Bpump Tokyo) and there is a ton of english speaking staff. Personally I would say it's the most foreign friendly one.
I'm actually making a guide of the gym but it's not gonna be done in time for you 🥲
You should subscribe this man. This is golden content.
thanks for the support!!
may I ask are you doing a working holiday in Japan as a staff?
I did one last year!