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Memory Games 2013 On The Science Channel

This coming Monday is kind of a big deal for me (and for Memory Sports in general). It's the first seriously televised memory event in the history of the world! You might have already seen a promo for it on TV. http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/memory-games/memory-games-videos/how-to-memorize-numbers.htm

I haven't seen the show so I'm a bit scared how they will portray me, but it is what it is. The idea of the show is that they'll follow 6-10 of the mental athletes competing in this year's USA Memory Championships (which was this past March in NYC...*SPOILER* I lost stupidly in the final round, if you remember *SPOILER*). It should be a pretty sweet showing though, the producers of the show were very adamant about making the show, and memory in general, seem "cool" and "hip" (which it is, duh)....For example, they had me go to South Beach and randomly stop girls on Spring Break (in bikinis of course) and ask if I could memorize their phone numbers, haha. Should be fun.

Anyways, watch it, DVR it, do whatever you have to do to see it.

It's on the Science Channel on July 15th (this coming Monday) at 10pm.

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The Amazingness of Properly Oxygenated Sleep

There is this night I slept down in Pheriche (which is the village below the South Side Everest Base Camp that most people retreat to after for good food and thicker air) back in 2011 after my expedition was over. I hadn"t been below 17,000 ft in over a month and a half, and while I was totally acclimatized, obviously any extra air was welcome. I slept so incredibly well that night, that I was hooked on writing about that particular experience. It was like a drug high that I couldn"t explain. I journaled about it extensively, but never in public.

In Zhangmu, Tibet, the same thing happened. We were at 17,000 ft at Everest Base Camp the day before and for the night we were now just below 10,000 ft. A HUGE difference in terms of how thick and abundant the air is. In a Chuck Norris killing-two-stones-with-one-bird kinda way, let me just describe to you what it was like to open my eyes the next morning after the resulting sleep:

As I woke up immersed in a creamy thick-like soup bath of air, my eyes struggled to open, feeling as if they were being opened for the very first time. First, they had crusted over with so much oxygen-induced lubrication that I felt like a baby struggling to use it"s new eyelid muscles as it entered the world. Second, with my brain turning on all its neurons fully ready to fire with all the available oxygen made me suddenly feel like I was a speed thinking genius, capable of doing mental math faster than a trained Vedic math Indian Guru, capable of In order to get subsidies all you need to do is sign up with the affordablehealth.info exchange. out-mind reading any gifted psychic, more witty in word-grabbing than fricking Grandmaster Flash, and more alert at hearing single keys rattling, ants scurrying, hairs falling, butter melting, eyes rolling, single hands clapping, than the most deaf man in the universe.

The feeling of immerging from such a deep and solidly oxygenated sleep was akin to awaking from 1 million sleeps, simultaneously (maybe even more...). Imagine feeling like Neo, being awoken from The Matrix for the first time, or like Leo getting jolted back from his dream within a dream within a dream like in Inception. I felt like I had just peeled off my outer shell and stepped through as a completely lighter, cleaner (although I still hadn"t showered and smelled like hot curry mixed with copious amounts of balsamic vinegar and a tablespoon of pencil shavings), more wholesome person. Every time I took in a deep breath the sludge of air permeated throughout my whole self and my entire body felt like it was glowing like that neon green thing that gets stuck in Homer"s shirt during The Simpsons intro. My fingers and toes tingled intensely like I was being blasted by Chernobyl radiation and my temples throbbed with the sensation that they were being hosed down with a massive firetruck nozzle of flowing oxygen.

That probably still doesn"t make any sense. Maybe try and imagine this: last night you took a pill and it took you to a place you could only imagine. An amazing euphoric place with prancing unicorns, rainbows with 3 ends, leprechauns who provided their lucky charms freely, ogres who offered their bridges as suntanning posts with constantly flowing and free oven-steaming brownies. Hobbits and wizards and elves were there too to feed you grapes and delicious milk chocolate buttons made from the milk of the same cows that are purple and live in Switzerland, whose sole purpose is to provide the milk in all the most delicious milk chocolate in the world. Ghandi and Mother Theresa are there as well, reading all the best Mother Goose nursery rhymes while doing 100% accurate impersonations of all the comedians and actors that make you laugh, like Christopher Walken, Robin Williams, and Arnold Schwarzanegger. To top it all off, a background soundtrack is being played and orchestrated by Frank Sinatra himself, while a string orchestra of 10,000 are playing Katy Perry"s "Firework", all the while bright green (and neon pink) tennis balls are being superfluously lobbed and served non-stop into the sky by the hottest version of Anna Kournikova you can imagine (or Andy Roddick, whichever you prefer), and as the balls land they splash into colorful pools of liquid fruit roll ups and jelly babies.

Then you wake up.

That"s how it feels. Absolutely invigorating and refreshing. I know half (or all) of that is ridiculous, but it really is an out-of-this world experience and difficult to describe. I just remember thinking how great it was to feel alive again at that moment! It"s just amazing how important oxygen is for our body and system. I know that"s an obvious realization, but most people never get the opportunity to remove themselves from our oxygen-rich environment and then re-immerse themselves later. I did, and it was awesome :)

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Re-post Of My Summit Day Account

I"ve received such positive feedback on my summit day account that I just had to re-post the whole thing here (it was sitting on the Fusion IO - my sponsor"s - website - www.fusionio.com/memorychallenge). Enjoy.



The Pre-summit push

Lets start out with PRE summit day. Coming off of two nights at Camp 2 (we were only supposed to stay there one night, but high winds kept us locked in place), I was a bit nervous. Our expedition had us running thin late in the season, which meant a lot of my strength had dissipated, and an extra night at 7800m (near the death zone) with no oxygen—we had to conserve it for later—and no food but a soup packet, some crackers, and a few candy bars (to save weight I only brought up a limited number of meals, which I had already eaten), I myself was running thin as well. But I made do. Once the wind died down the 21st, we made the move to Camp 3.

Now Phil and every other source known to man had me believe (and our whole team too) that it was gonna be a short climb up about 500m, two to four hours, to put us in place for our summit push at Camp 3. A short day so that we could rest for the same evening departure for the summit. It took me eight frigging hours, and was probably one of the most challenging mountaineering days of my life. Phil took an oddly-slow six hours, and one of our members (who is typically fast) took an excrutiatingly long 11.5 hours.

What. The. Hell. Happened?

Maybe it was the fact that our Camp 2 was slightly lower this year, maybe it was that extra day we had to stay at Camp 2, maybe it was the weather or air pressure, maybe it was just a crap day for all of us. But the bottom line is it screwed us all. Me especially. I was one of the slowest that day. Mentally, it was painfully hard for me. For some reason, every step I took was so difficult to take. I"d take one, then look up and see I"d made so little progress, each step requiring about 10 breaths.

Camp 2 sits on this rocky spine on the North East Ridge and was just a shifty rock scramble to get out of (took ages), but from there there was a snow ramp and then more shifty rock. Once I reached that point (about 8000m—officially in the "Death Zone"). I sat down and looked out at the Himalayan expanse and just started sobbing. I don"t know really why, but I guess at that moment I suddenly felt completely defeated. I thought of all the people I was going to disappoint, especially myself, but I just couldn"t get myself up and keep climbing. What was the point? Get to Camp 3 exhausted and then not have anything left for the summit? But I had put so much into this to just turn around.

So I sat there. It was stunningly beautiful. Just facing me and sitting higher than this opposite peak Changtse, and diagonal from the sixth highest peak in the world, Cho Oyu, I was literally sitting above all the surrounding Himalayan mountain range. A few minutes later, a team member came by me and offered me some encouragement (and some candy). She got me up and moving again up this second snow slope.

That whole effing slope was the death of me. It must have taken me hours. Part way up it, my team mate had long zoomed around the top corner and my Sherpas had scooted up as well (probably slightly annoyed with my slow pace). So I slumped down and sat there again, this time 100% convinced it was all over. I think I sat there for 40 minutes before I moved at all. I finally tried to search my bag for my radio to phone Phil to talk ,but I was so helplessly weak I just gave up. Luckily I was able to wave down one of my Sherpas, Lakpa Dorje, off at the top of the stretch, who was waiting for me, and he came down. He gave me his radio and I called Phil.

"Phil, this is Nelson, over."

"Copy, Go ahead buddy."

"I"m screwed. Totally screwed. I"m moving VERY slowly and I"m having an emotional breakdown . I don"t know what to do anymore."

"Where are you?"

"At the snow ramp, just above 8000m."

"Okay, Camp 3 is just over the hill. You can do it buddy."

"Yeah?"

"Yeah I know you can."

....

....

"Ok..."

First of all, Phil lied through his teeth. It wasn"t just over the hill. Good GOD it wasn"t. Second, the way he said the last part of the conversation just made me get up and go again. Not sure why. Phil has this way of making everything seem okay in the way he speaks, and I guess it was what I needed to hear right then and there.

So I got up and moved. I also knew I was at a point where my oxygen was running out, so I knew it was important to get to Camp 3 just for a fresh bottle. That helped too. For the moment I told myself, let me just get to the top of the hill and see what"s around the corner. Usually when I can see a tent or two, psychologically it does wonders for my physical progress, and then I"ll make my next decision. Bite size pieces.

It must have taken an hour, but I plodded on. One step at a time.

Turned the corner and—nope. Another ramp up. Oh, and a dead body. Yup. A Sherpa had just plopped down and died a few days prior, and there he was lying on the trail, face up. It looked like a bad joke or a not-so-funny scene from "A Weekend From Bernie"s," but the reality was that this guy was doing the same thing I was—and he died. That thought can sober you up and motivate you real quick, let me tell you. Having to step over him to continue on the trail can also help with that too.

The next corner.

I couldn"t see a tent, but I could see a section flattening out . I knew it had to be a suitable place for a Camp. More plodding up and finally I saw some yellow tents. Then I could suddenly see all of them. It just took another hour or so to get to them. Once I did, I fell into my tent, had my Sherpas undo my crampons, and I sprawled into a corner of the tent as two other Sherpas followed suit. I was exhausted, but safe. I changed my bottle and just lay there, in disbelief of what I had just done.

The feeling I had of getting to that point—Camp 3, 8300m, the highest campsite in the world—was complete, utter joy. I really can"t compare it to anything I"ve ever done before. I can usually put myself through A LOT of pain and stress, but that climb topped everything and anything I"ve ever accomplished. I had pulled something deep from within that I had never seen before. I had done something incredible (incredible to me, at least). I didn"t care about the summit right at that moment anymore. I was just so proud of myself for pushing through. It was truly the most monumental thing I had ever done for myself. And for that I was satisfied.

After getting some melted snow in my system (thanks to my amazing Sherpas), Phil broadcasted to us over the radio that some people had yet to arrive. That made me feel better—I thought I was the last of the lasts. A few hours later everyone was in, so Phil discussed the summit plan for the evening, saying we would leave at 9:00 p.m. Those that had arrived later could leave later so they could rest more.

I guess being charged by my recent performance, I was suddenly pumped to continue for the summit. After all, from Camp 3 the summit literally looks like you can touch it. It"s right there, only 500m above.


The Actual Summit Push

So I got in my zone. Listened to all my "climbing" music, ate a candy bar, and laid there as the sun set and began to get freezing. Oh yes, I was gonna do this thing. I quickly forgot about how tired my body was, having not eaten real food for a couple days, not having slept much, oh and haven gotten the crap kicked out of myself that very same day.

No matter.

8:30 p.m. came around and I reached for my headlamp and started packing my rucksack and arranging my gear. Two headlamps, heavy mitts, candy bars, one liter of water tucked in my down suit, hand warmers in my climbing gloves, electronic foot warmers in my boots, harness—I. Was. Ready.

I dangled my legs out of the tent, seeing some of my team mates already heading up. It was biting cold, but clear star-lit skies with a bright half-moon over head. Lakpa helped me with my crampons (Sherpas can handle cold better with their hands more than the "Inji" can), I threw on my pack, clipped into the rope, and I started moving. It was just after 9:30 pm. I could see the small trail of headlamps filing up the rock wall above. I followed.

At first, slow and cautious—I didn"t want to over do it, given my body was tired (mentally I had convinced it not to be, but I knew the reality), but soon I got into a rhythm so good that I soon over passed a few climbers, including honorary Sherpa Phil. I felt awesome.

The first part of the summit climb is up part of the North Face that leads you up through a vertical maze of rock, then through a few massive boulders called the Exit Cracks. Through these, you get up into the North Ridge. This ridge leads you right up gradually, except for a few noticeable negotiations, to the summit.

So the first part took about two and a half hours. It reminded me a lot of the steep slog up to the Balcony on the South Side, just with way more rock. Once I cleared the Cracks, I stepped into the exposed ridge and WHAM, was hit full force by the wind. It"s very exposed on that ridge. I mean, you are standing where jetliners typically fly! The wind bit through all my gear—so cold. I could feel the snot and moisture from my mask instantly freezing into thick icicles on my beard. I pulled my down suit hood deep over my head, which helped a lot, but suddenly my extremities were getting sharply cold. But I kept plodding along the ridge, getting a quick shock when I spotted "ol Green Boots, the dead body of an Indian climber from years ago who had crawled into a small cavernous rock for safety, but who now lays sprawled out partly on the trail as a supposed "monument" — exposing his neon green boots. Great, another dead body, I thought.

I"ve always had poor circulation in my fingers and toes, and over the years of climbing I"ve figured out ways to fight this problem and make sure I don"t get frostbite. I"ve come close a few times, but luckily only walked away with some frostnip (which heals a LOT better and lets you keep your digits). I"ve always managed to learn new tricks and combinations of gear to prevent this. But up at 8500m, no matter what you"ve learned, it"s hard to fix coldness. There just isn"t anywhere to get heat from other than yourself moving or maybe the sun (which in my case wasn"t coming up for another few hours).

First it was my hands—my hand warmers, which had been toasty all the way up through the Exit Cracks, suddenly were rendered useless. The wind had overpowered their warmth. Every few moves up the rope I had to slide my gloves up and clench my hands around the hand warmers to extract as much warmth as I could from them inside my glove. It worked until I realized the line of headlamps behind me was slowly closing in. Up ahead of me loomed the First Step—one of the three negotiations on the ridge I mentioned earlier. I wasn"t gonna be able to continue like this with all these people up my ass, especially with a big rock climb ahead of me. So I pulled aside (not really much room to go "aside" on a ridge, but I did my best). I asked my Sherpa if he could reach into my sack for my big mitts (these puppies are massive and warm—think puffy down-filled baking oven mitts). At this point Phil and my other team mates were beginning to pass, quickly asking what was up but then pressing on (not really much time or space for a real Q&A up there). I got my mitts on, clapped my hands together a few times and continued on.

Then it got worse. My hands were warming up slightly, but my thumbs just wouldn"t move. That makes using a jumar, beener, and rope very difficult—yeah, you can"t grab stuff without out thumbs (ask your dog, he knows about this). I couldn"t figure out how to move up the rope safely enough. So I kept stopping and trying to warm my hands. All the while, my foot warmers had decided it was too cold to keep working—the batteries had died—so now I was worrying about my toes as well. Not a good combo.

I could have kept going, and maybe my toes and hands would have eventually warmed up on their own through movement, but the bottleneck of people up the First Step ahead suggested to me that I might be moments away from losing digits. I wasn"t going to be moving fast enough to generate much body heat.

Being in this position before, and having to decide the importance of getting to a single point in space or not, vs. losing my life or things important to my life—i.e. my fingers and toes—the decision was easy. Turn around.

Don"t get me wrong, I want and have wanted to conquer this mountain for years, and I will someday, but not today. Not like that. I value the journey more than the single point.

The decision came easily this time. No regrets. I turned around. I came down with the help of Lakpa, who helped me clip in and out of the rope with my frozen blocks for hands. My toes were getting worse by the minute but at least I knew in a couple hours I would be warming them back up in my sleeping bag.

The descent in the dark was terrifying. I kept tripping over past years" ropes and worrying whether my hands were really gripping the rope as tightly as I was thinking they were (I couldn"t feel them). I stumbled a good number of times down the rock face, but luckily managed to straighten myself out safely and quickly enough. I"m sure if it had been in daylight, with the massive drops in full sight, I would have crapped myself righteously. But luckily the depth of my headlamp into the abyss was only 20—30 feet down. But it was still frightening. Really frightening. At one point I slid and a rock shot out from under me. As I turned my head to see where it landed, I saw it "thump" against the back of a face down dead body just a few feet below me. Jesus Christ. A Japanese climber had fallen and died there just a few days ago on his descent. In that instant, my choice for turning around were completely and wholly justified. I mean, seriously, screw this, I thought, what was I doing here?

I was on some other level at the point, zoned in to just make it down to my tent, which I did safely from that point on. Getting inside my tent and my gradually warming sleeping bag was one of the most glorious feelings ever. I was asleep instantly, but just before passing out, I remember giving out one of the largest sighs of relief I"ve ever given out.

After all was said and done, only four of our team members pushed on through to the summit (plus six Sherpas). The rest turned around for one reason or another. It was a tough summit day. A very cold and windy one.

I hate giving excuses, and I know I"ve provided many above for why I turned around (cold extremities, poor nutrition, pure exhaustion), but the fact remains that other people still summited in the same conditions, even worse conditions on previous days, yet I didn"t. So why did they summit and not me? Why didn"t I even after my second try? I"m strong, I prepared extremely hard, I put EVERYTHING I had into this. And still it wasn"t enough. Why?

What I realized on this expedition is that summiting Everest takes a lot of things to go perfect and in your favor. So many things. Everyone is different—mentally, physiologically, and physically. Some people have a higher tolerance for cold and pain, some people are stronger for longer periods of time, some people have better patience, some people are more willing to risk things when it comes down to it. Maybe that"s my limiting factor: to what point I"m willing to push my body and to what cost. Maybe I"m too scared of that point and that"s what stops me. Who knows? Whatever it is, I honestly don"t care. I"m happy with what I"ve done and I"m happy that I am able to come back in one piece to talk about it. The experience to me is more important than the actual summit really. What is that summit anyway?The mountain will always be there, but I might not. So why make it worth anything damaging to yourself?

I"m sorry to those who where rooting for me and for those who supported me. I tried my very best, but sadly came up a bit short. But, I"m okay with that. So hopefully you will be too. The joy and experience this climb/expedition has given me is more than any standing on a summit will ever give me, so thank you. I"m now safe at Base Camp enjoying beer and steak. Now begins the quick process of getting the hell out of here and back to the luxuries of normal life (showers and pizza). I am happy and with a shaggy beard.


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All's Good.

photo(1)I'm back home and feeling good. Well, as good as one can be after an Everest expedition. The official weight I lost was 30 lbs, give or take a few. I initially thought it was 25 or so, but I woke up the following morning and was 6 lbs lighter....what the? And that was a few days after my summit push (which I'm sure I was lighter just afterwards). Pretty scary. I didn't even lose that much last time I climbed Everest, and this time I was eating like an absolute cow (steaks and chickens and all that goodness). I'm pretty sure it had to do with the extended time we spent at ABC as well as the longer summit push on the North Side. I have a bit of frostnip on my thumbs and pointer fingers, as well as my two big toes (just the tips though). They are still numb and the outer layer of skin is coming off. I'm happy with that...no permanent damage. After all was said and done, this season on Everest was actually pretty normal, aside from the poor weather forecasts we had. In my opinion the weather was just totally bizarre on the North Side. Everything seemed "early" in April, and then the Jet Stream just never really lifted properly as it was supposed to, so we could sneak under it. I remember getting on the plane back to London from Delhi on May 29th, reading the paper, and there was an article talking about how the monsoon hadn't properly moved in yet and that it was still expected to do so in the next few days. Crazy. That's so late in the season. For a more in depth recap of the season, check out Alan Arnette's blog post:

Anyways, the bottom line is that the North Side was brutally cold and windy and my body just wasn't suited for it this time around. Voila. Now I'm home in Miami, sun-burned from the beach already, and starting the process of bulking up again (FYI, I can't lift anything at the gym anymore...it's pretty sad). I'll be dreaming of my next big challenging climb (probably some time next year), but in the mean time, it's back to hardcore memory training for the World Memory Championships come December.

Cheers!

(PS. Pics are coming soon....stay tuned. Video too.)

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Made it to Step 1 but had to turn back ... Back at BC

You can read my SUMMIT DAY Blog Post ... my account of what happened the day before, the hours leading up to the moment I realized I had to turn around, and the glorious feeling of relief when I arrived back at Advanced Base Camp by visiting: http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/summit/#!/1061

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The Summit is near!

We left Camp 3 at around 10pm and are headed up to the Summit. Should be reaching it around sunrise. Weather conditions are good! http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/ascent/#!/1035

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Waiting for good weather at ABC...

If you haven"t been following along on http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/intro/, make sure you do!

We returned to advanced base camp a day ago after spending 2014Unibetin mobiilikasino toimii niin iPhone-, Android- kuin Nokia-laitteilla seka puhelimessa etta tabletissa. a night at the North Col. We were hoping for a possible early summit but the weather wasn"t cooperating. Please stay tuned to the fusion-io website for further updates.

Hoping for a successful summit push in the next 3-5 days!

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Things are starting to move & a burpee attempt at BC

Things are starting to move... slowly but surely. Trying my best to speed up time as much as possible. Things are Moving Blog Post: http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/acclimation/#!/991

I tried to move... attempted 30 burpees for time @17,000 ft. Not sure it was a good idea!

Burpee Bungle Blog Post: http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/acclimation/#!/999

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Advanced Base Camp today, North Col tomorrow!

Feeling much better now that my body has adjusted a bit. Managed to send 2 new blog posts through: "Challenged by Altitude Change" and "Almost like a Beach Day" - North Col tomorrow! http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/intro/ - click on "GO"

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Cabin Fever at Base Camp

Cabin (Tent) Fever is kicking in! Keeping busy with memory training and a hike! Check out the new blogs: "On the way to Advanced Base Camp" and "Cabin Fever" - just click "GO" on the homepage!

http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/intro/

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Puja Ceremony

Mountain gods honored, gear blessed, whiskey shots taken, rupees lost... Great day at Everest Base Camp. For more on the Traditional Puja Ceremony and the events that followed, read my blog on the Fusion-io Memory Challenge Website - http://memorychallenge.fusionio.com/intro/

4 more days until we go up to Advanced Base Camp!

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Nyalam

Made it through the Chinese border! In snowy Nyalam for the night ... Blog Post: http://www.fusionio.com/memorychallenge/updates/index.html

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Fusion IO Memory Challenge

What's up everyone? I just landed in Kathmandu this afternoon - what a long and tiresome journey! Make sure to follow my social media on twitter @climbformemory or www.facebook.com/climbformemory, and all of my blog updates and everything awesome about my climb from:

www.fusionio.com/memorychallenge

There you'll be able to track my progress, read my blog posts, interact with the mountain, and learn about how I'm training and testing my brain up the mountain.

All blog posts will be posted there (I will always post a link to the latest blog on this website as well).

Namaste!

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I'm Going to K-K-K-Kathmandu

IMG_2127It's such an odd experience reliving an exact circumstance of two years ago, being two years older. In 2011, I left for Kathmandu to climb Mt. Everest right about this time. It seems like ages ago - as if I was a completely different person back then. I feel like last time I just threw myself out there, without much of a thought (but with a lot of training, nevertheless), excited like a school girl at prom. But this time I feel a lot more composed, serious, and confident going in. Maybe it's from all the intense training, maybe it's what happens when you fail the first time and are given one last shot, maybe it's because I'm older and pretty much 30. Who knows? All I know, is that I like the feeling this time around; it feels good. I have no idea what's going to happen in the next 2 months - high-altitude mountaineering can do the strangest, unforeseen, things to people - but I know I am going to enjoy the experience more than ever and will try my hardest to climb this damn mountain. I leave April 1st, traveling Miami-Houston-London-New Delhi-Kathmandu (fun, right?). Once I get to the bustling Kathmandu, I'll get a few days to organize my gear, buy some last minute things, meet my team, stuff my face with some fatty, delicious American-style foods, take a lot of hot showers, etc. We'll then drive out to the Tibetan border on April 6th and should arrive at Base Camp on April 10th.

As for how you'll be able to follow me and my teams progress....there are a few ways.

1. Altitude Junkies - the company I am climbing with - has a blog that will have updates on our team whenever possible. 2. Fusion-io - the company I work with as a brand ambassador and a sponsor of my climb - they are launching a website which will have ALL my personal blog posts and updates. To top it all off, the site will be monitoring my memory training progress up the mountain. All new blog posts on that site will be linked from the blog on this site (site URL will be announced soon). 3. Twitter/facebook. If you aren't following or liking @ClimbForMemory yet, then do it NOW!!

Here I go folks. Stay tuned.

PS. The picture above is what our camp will look like exactly. Go ahead, zoom in. It's pretty awesome!

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Not Winning Is A Good Thing

memo1It's been a few days since the competition but I wanted to give myself a few days before I wrote anything. So if you haven't heard...I didn't win. Good god it feels like 2010 all over again. It actually doesn't even feel like I even won the last two years, haha. I came in 2nd, actually. Quite frustrating because if you look at the USA Memory Championship website, it looks like I won because it says I was in 1st place overall. But that's the nature of the competition. It doesn't really matter how you did through all the events, but rather how you do in the last event. Here's a recap of how the day went down:

I decided to get to the competition early this year just to scope things out. The Science Channel had supposedly put all these cameras and cranes and things up, and if there's one thing I've learned about myself and memory competitions is that I need to know the who, the what, and the where of everything before I go in or else I freak out and lose focus. So I did just that.

I did my usual walk down 3rd ave listening to my memory competition play-list, made a right on 14th street and found the all-too-familiar Con Edison building looming above me. There was a camera guy waiting outside to film competitors arriving and no sooner did I enter the building I got a tap on the shoulder from the camera guy asking if I could pretend walking in one more time. Reality TV is so not EVER real!

Anyways, I met a few familiar faces on the elevator ride up and then entered the main hall. I actually expected more of a to-do from the Science Channel. There was just one large crane and the amount of media present was really the same as previous years except all of them were Science Channel folks in orange shirts (I think other media had been limited by the organizers).

I was placed in the first table as usual, in close proximity to past winners Ronnie White, Chester Santos, and Ram Kolli (who finally showed up after a two year hiatus). I was actually pretty excited to see Ram (little did I know he would later beat me. HA.). Did a few interviews, said hello to all the usual suspects, then sat down in my seat ready as ready could be.

First event was Names and Faces (15 minutes to memorize as many names as possible). I love starting with this event because it isn't a very stressful event because you don't know what you're gonna get. No pressure. Last year I got 163 names right and the record is 174. In practice I had been hitting 195-200 names. I didn't pace myself very well and only touched 180 names this time. I usually get a handful of spellings wrong, so it's safe to deduct 20 names or so for a final score (you don't get points for incorrectly spelled names). I was pretty on target with that guestimate because I scored 162. Better than most everyone. Michael Glantz hit 152 - solid. I was surprised how low everyone else's scores were compared to ours - I think the next closest was around 132.

Second event was Speed Numbers (5 minutes to memorize as many digits as possible). First trial was a mess. I was too distracted by cameras and found myself going slower than usual. I made it to about 300 digits before I had to start reviewing. Made a ton of mistakes during recall and ended up with a score of 194 digits - meh. Second trial felt so smooth. I made it to 342 digits and I felt perfect about them all. There was a stupid mistake made by the organizers though - they forgot to stop everyone at 5 minutes, so people kept memorizing and I had to awkwardly shout out that time was done. I honestly blame that moment on the fact that I made 2 mistakes in my recall. Because of that I got 302 digits instead of the full 342. The last 4 digits on the 320-340 digit row were 3161 but I had memorized them by a quick mental photograph when time ran out. But when I had to shout out to correct the judges on the time, I guess I was distracted enough to flip the 61 into a 16 in my mind. So I wrote 3116 and got that row wrong because of it. Had i gotten it right I would have beaten my old record with 322 digits. DAMN. But 302 is still respectable and miles ahead of anyone else (the next closest was 132 digits).

Third event was Poetry. It was a tough poem with long lines and super erratic punctuation. I went for about 220 points (I went for 233 points last year) and ended up with a score of 165. Good enough for tied 3rd with Mike Mirski.

Fourth event was Speed Cards. First trial I decided to play it safe just to have a good score under my belt. That usually means I need to go through the deck twice. I nailed it in 1 minute, 7 seconds. Johnny Briones did an awesome 1m28s next to me. I felt awesome because nailing it in the first trial allowed me to go buck wild in the second. I typically go too fast the first time, get it wrong, then have to stress about getting it right the second. But this time I was free to go nuts for the second trial. I just went for it and slapped the timer at 34.97 seconds! On the recall I felt good, had everything correct except two cards. ARGHHH! Swapped them. So close to a personal competition best and a huge USA record. Oh well. Until next year, I suppose. I was expecting Jared Alderman to shine here, but I guess certain things didn't go his way. It happens.

So with winning 3 out of the 4 morning events, I was sure to get in the top 8. Actually 1st place. Thank the fricking baby jesus. I had been so stressed about whether or not I'd get in this year. So many people were talking about threatening this score and that, but in the end no one came even close. I never understand why this happens - it's the same story every year. Anyways, we had lunch and then started the afternoon rounds with the top 8: Me, David Kutz, Michael Glantz, Noah Ehrich, Mike Mirski, Johnny Briones, Ram Kolli, and Chester Santos (No Ron White! I was shocked).

Random Words was first (15 minutes to memorize as many words as possible from a 200 word list). I always go for 100, but I pushed for 130 to be safe. I can usually do something close to that in just over 5 minutes, so it's a pretty safe score for me. We went out on stage and nobody was getting any words wrong! I think we got into the 80th words before someone made a mistake. At around 100, we had our first 3 contestants knocked out. This is always the scariest event for me, just because it's so easy to slip up and you only have ONE shot. But I made it through, thankfully.

The Tea Party was up next, and in my opinion was a total shit show. The people that the organizers got to read out their profiles were so annoying - everyone suddenly thought they were professional actors or something (I guess because they were gonna be on TV?). It made the event look kind of stupid. Either way, I hardly ever listen to the people talking anyways. I just memorize it straight from the sheet. Then we got an extra 5 minutes to review everything in the back room. Easy. Didn't make a mistake at all. Michael, Ram, and I made it through.

On to the finals: Double Deck 'O Cards (5 minutes to memorize two decks). I had practiced this so much. In practice I had even gotten my 2 deck time down to 2m30 seconds. Typically in competition it takes me about 45 seconds to go through each deck the first time and then I spend the rest of the time reviewing the decks as many times as possible. So the 5 minutes ended and as we walked to the stage, I mentally rehearsed both decks. Knew them down cold. As we went started reciting the deck on stage, out loud, I remember being so careful and focused on saying each card correctly. It's easy to say the wrong card even if you are thinking the right one. Michael Glantz got eliminated on the 27th card, then I corrected him with "6 of diamonds", Ram: "10 of Spades", me: "9 of hearts", Ram: "2 of Spades", me: "Queen of Clubs", Ram: "Jack of Hearts". All while this is happening, Tony Dottino (the MC) is telling us to slow down and is having trouble showing the audience the cards. I remember the crowd kind of muttering at this point and me looking over at Tony briefly. I think at that moment is when my focus shifted and I temporarily lifted myself out of the memory palace I was in for the cards. When I went back in, I started speaking before I knew where I was. "2 of Spades" I said (which was the correct answer 3 cards prior)....instantly as I said it, I knew what I was saying was wrong. It was "Ace of Spades"....FUCKKKKKKK. And that was it. I lost. Just like that. Off of a stupid mistake. It felt like 2010 all over again.

Such is life.

So there you have it. My 2 year dominance stunted by a dumb mistake. Congrats to Ram for sneaking into the top 8 and having the persistence to stick it out till the end. That might have been my last USA Memory Competition....at least my last USAMC in that format.

Losing sucks, for sure. And it hurts especially when you know you could have won for a third straight time. But I have to look at the positive, and that is that losing is usually better than winning. At least in terms of where it takes you next. When I lost in 2010, it pushed me and motivated me like crazy to win in 2011. I did. But after winning for 2 years straight, it was a lot harder to push myself this time around. So with this loss, I know I'll have to push myself in another direction, and for that I am happy. I needed that boost. So whatever it is that I push myself towards next, watch out!

But for now, on to EVEREST!

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Third Times A Charm

afp000323304Too bad this is my 5th time :) The 2013 USA Memory Championship is finally upon us! The 16th annual competition of the minds starts at 8:30am this Saturday, March 16th in the Con Edison Building (4 Irving Place, NYC). For those of you planning to go (and everyone reading this should be planning to go), the first event starts at around 8:45. You'll be seeing us "mental athletes" memorize names and faces, massive numbers, poems, and then decks of cards. That's in the a.m. After we break for lunch, the top 8 competitors battle it out elimination-style on stage. To me, this is really the most exciting part of the competition for viewers, so if you don't have all day to kill, aim to show up at around 1:30 to see that. It goes till about 5ish.

Good god it's gonna be a good one! This is how excited I am: here and here and here. I'm trying to win my third title in a row, while a good handful of new-comers are setting their sights on the title as well. Some competitors are even throwing around the world "world record" for a lot of the events. I've set records that are respectable in the world of memory, but to see a world record be broken on the USA stage would be unprecedented. We will see.

How am I feeling? Honestly, I don't think I've ever felt so calm before a competition. Back in 2010 when I first tried to win, I was nervous as hell. In 2011 I was slightly nervous but confident more than anything. In 2012 I was an absolute wreck - I have no idea how I kept it together. But this year I for once, feel great. Not because I'm kick-ass confident or anything, but more because I don't really care as much this time around. And when I don't really care when memorizing, I memorize the best. Either way, I'll be trying to break all the US records as usual. Hopefully I can walk out with a few new ones and a few old ones improved.

Hope you can make it out there. If you can't then you can follow my twitter. I'll be tweeting as much as I can throughout the day.

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Memorizing Without Thinking

IMG_2016It"s 5:30pm and I"m reviewing the list of attendees for the night"s Fusion-io event - an event celebrating their top 100 customers in Japan. Yeah, Japan. I"m trying desperately to make some sense out of all these crazy looking names I"m reading. Takenori, Takeshi, Katsutoshi, Yoshihiro, Kazuhiko, the list goes on. To a native, names like these are no problem, but for me they literally look like Japanese. I"ve memorized rooms full of people before, but with names like Bob, Steve, Carol, and maybe a lengthy asian name here and there - but for the most part not. At 6pm, I"ve positioned myself at the entrance of the banquet hall where the clients will enter once having registered. At first two stroll in: Yuta and Toshikazu. I bow and introduce myself and they politely return the bow and present their business cards. I pause for a moment, work my memory magic, and I"m good; I"ve memorized their names.

A few more people walk in and I repeat the process. So far so good. But soon, the volume of people coming in is too much for me to handle and I can"t introduce myself to everyone so easily. I do my best but soon find myself flustered in a room full of 40 (and climbing) Japanese men. What"s worse, and I hate to say it, is that I"m having a hard time telling the difference between many of them. They"re all wearing similar business suits and they all have very similar facial features (at least to me, an American who"s not accustomed to being around asians). I can typically pick out a feature on an a Westerner in a split second, but here it"s a real challenge.

Time is running out - I only have until 6:30 to make my way around the room and learn as many names as possible, then the event will start. Ryusuke, Yousuke, Kensuke, Horishi, Tonesuki, Daniel (phew, an easy one), Hideki, the names keep coming. I make it through about 60 or so people before time finally runs out.

The event begins. Founders David Flynn and Rick White do their magic on stage, and soon after The Woz joins them for a Q&A. A sake barrel is hammered open in custom, a toast is made, and dinner is served. It"s nearly showtime. I scan each of the 11 tables in the room to make sure I remember all the names. I"m drawing a lot of blanks. This is gonna be a disaster.

Finally I"m ushered backstage. They play a short media clip about me and I"m called to the stage. "If you remember shaking my hand when you entered, please stand up." Over half the room stands up. Yikes. "If I say your name correctly, have a seat. If not, stay standing. I apologize if I mis-pronounce your name, I"ve never had to memorize so many Japanese names in my life! It was quite a challenge." The audience lets out a polite laugh but I know I"ll have to nail everyone"s name or else it"s not gonna be very impressive.

I walk over to one of the tables in the front that I feel very comfortable with. I nail the names of the 5 people standing. Each one lets out a resounding "OHHHHHH" as I correctly say their name. Okay…I got this, I say to myself as I move on to the next table. Boom, Bam, Boom, name after name I fire them off almost without thinking. More ooohhhs and ahhhhhs. "I"ll come back to you later" I say to one guy in particular whom I can"t remember. I circle the room, flawless. I mispronounce one name, but I can see they are very understanding and still impressed. I come to the last table and name "Toshikazu" - "Aha!" I turn to the gentleman I had previously skipped over in the front of the room. "Your name is Toshikazu too!" DONE. The room bursts into thunderous applause. I have no idea how, but I"ve done it.

That was a short recap of my recent business trip last week. The point of the story is to emphasize how important it is to trust in your memory. I"ve talked about this before, but I"ve found that the fastest times and best scores I"ve achieved while memorizing have all happened when I wasn"t really thinking. I know that sounds odd. How can you memorize something, which in itself is a process that requires a great deal of thinking, without thinking? I don"t have a solid answer for that, but I do know that memory works better when confidence is high. I guess because a lot of the thinking/memorizing power can get lost in the thoughts of self-doubt and unsureness while memorizing. If you remove that and just "look" at what you are memorizing (using techniques of course - just looking at stuff won"t help you memorize better) it"ll flow and stick better.

Performing at a high level without thinking is a phenomenon that applies to a bunch of different arenas. The idea is that you become so proficient in a skill or task through practice, that you can almost operate without thinking. Think of when a basketball player catches fire. He has no idea why, it just happens. And then compare it to someone in a slump, à la Tiger Woods. Suddenly the best golfer in the world sucks and everything he tries to do to fix his poor performance just seems to make him even worse.

So if you"re ever frustrated with your performance, in whatever field that may be, just remember that sometimes less thinking can improve performance. So just let go. Step back form the situation and just do it.

 

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