Climbing a snow-capped mountain is to extend one's tentacles outwards, open up the numb senses on weekdays, detach oneself from the mediocrity, and use the softest part to feel the nature.


Why climb a snow mountain? When the body sounds the alarm in the severe cold and lack of oxygen, and every sense is preventing you from continuing to climb, the self-game you feel at that moment is the best answer to this question.


1. Remember your perseverance


In a fast-paced and fragmented society, the cost of giving up many things is very low, and persistence and all-out efforts are particularly valuable. Mountaineering requires all-out training.


Climbing stairs, running, doing core strength exercises, and walking with weights, the seemingly inconspicuous mechanical effort and constant repetition of each step make people feel pointless and want to give up. But in fact, it is a step by step toward the peak of success, and every drop of sweat on the training ground is meaningful.


The training time of amateur climbers in the plains is 1-3 months, which is boring and hard. They have to endure loneliness and persevere. If there is no accumulation of these abilities, it will suffer on the snow-capped mountains. After experiencing these, you will deeply understand that in life, it is difficult to succeed without sufficient accumulation.


2. Respect what we cannot change


There are plains, gravel roads, glaciers, snow slopes, and large rock walls on the snowy mountain road. They are changing and strange for us.But we must be familiar with these challange and prepare well in advance.


Therefore, climbers must stop complaining about changes, but respect the environment, actively adapt to find ways. Whether it is external equipment or our own experience and abilities, we must respect what we cannot change.


In life, we will also encounter many objective conditions that are difficult to change and our own limitations. Don't be too frustrated at this time. Respect them, do your best to do what you can, and in the end you'll find that's enough.


3. Pain helps us grow


Whether it is the process of climbing a snow mountain or the process of training, it can polish a person's character and character. All the boring training and tedious preparations only really ends when you reach the top of the mountain and go home safely.


In this process, you have to constantly motivate yourself by setting stage goals by yourself. For example, when you go up the stairs to 30 floors, or you complete several training sessions in a day, you can become your own small goals.


Most of the people who choose to climb the snow-capped mountains reflect the intention of making progress. In the future, whenever you encounter some difficulties, your brain will subconsciously think of how you have been brave, and these experiences will make you more courageous.