This quiz is designed to help whitewater paddlers assess what class of whitewater you have the skills to run with success.For each question, pick the answer that is most true for you now, not historically.Rigorous and honest self assessment is difficult, but it may be your most important skill for longterm enjoyment in a risky sport.If you are not honest with yourself, this tool is of no use.Our abilities shift throughout life so keep checking in about what you can do, adjust your paddling choices accordingly.You do not have to tell anyone else about your process.
To take the quiz: Jot down a single number answer to each question, making a list that looks something like this: 1, 3, 2, 2, etc.You should have a list with 11 numbers by the end.
Rolling
I roll most/all of the time in the pool but tend to bail in combat situations.
When I flip on the river I immediately get into a tightly tucked set-up position and try a roll or a T-rescue.
My roll is 90% or more successful on the river.
I roll on both sides, have a hand roll, and can usually do one of those in a pinch.
Ferrying
I can get across mild currents efficiently.
I’m confident doing a strong ferry across moderate current with turbulence.
I can jet ferry across intense current and hit the other side where I want.
I am comfortable using waves and holes to cross a rapid upstream from dangerous obstacles.
Catching Eddies
I catch the biggest eddy at the bottom of the rapid.
I enjoy catching medium sized eddies in the middle of rapids.
I like to sew up rapids by hopping from eddy to eddy all the way down.
I am happy catching tiny eddies in weird places for strategic positioning or to get a view of what’s downstream.
Reading Water
I need someone to follow because I'm not good at picking lines.
I usually follow through new rapids and feel OK leading through familiar rapids.
I can find my way down a new class II.
I pick my own routes in unfamiliar class III rapids without scouting or following.
Playing
I don't play because I don't want to flip over.
I play at the best spots when I am in my playboat.
I bow surf on waves when they have eddy service.
I catch waves on the fly and drop into holes sideways for fun.
Rescue
I hate swimming rapids and often need help getting my gear rounded up.
I am good at self rescue and often get my kit to shore before anybody shows up to help.
I always carry a throwbag and deploy it without hesitation.
I can extricate boats and people from pins in the river most of the time.
Strength
I need help loading my boat on the car.
I can lift my own boat overhead and set it on a vehicle.
I do shoulder and core exercises regularly because they improve my paddling.
I can carry my boat 0.7 miles and then paddle and portage for 4 hours.
Cardiovascular Fitness
My most vigorous workout is walking.
I run, bike or do cardio at the gym at least twice a week.
I do aerobic paddling workouts like sprints, slalom, or continuous/high water whitewater runs at least twice a week.
I can carry my boat four miles uphill then paddle big rapids without problems.
Toughness
I get emotional or angry when things don’t go well on the river.
I am anxious sometimes on the water but manage my fear without requiring reassurance from others.
I can take a bad swim or a beating on rocks/in a hole and still have a good day.
I am cool as a cucumber and can function in life and death situations.
Flows
I let other people decide when the flows are right for a run.
I know what CFS stands for.
I pay attention to gauge readings for each run I do (maybe even log them) and study the runoff/release patterns.
I carefully investigate flow recommendations and patterns for new runs and enjoy high and low water.
Crew
I participate in pick-up trips with people I find via the internet or clubs.
The folks I usually paddle with are mostly weaker paddlers than me.
I’ve had the good luck to fall in with a crew that’s stronger paddlers than me.
I paddle regularly with a few friends who are strong paddlers and whose habits and idiosyncrasies are well understood.
SCORING Don't cheat yourself! Write down your answers to all 11 questions THEN follow this link.
What is success? To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate the beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition; to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded! --Ralph Waldo Emerson
To know what a person says, we must hear what remains unsaid. If we cannot hear silence, we do not know how to listen. ~ Mark C. Taylor, “Hearing Silence”
The worst criticism seeks to have the last word and leave the rest of us in silence; the best opens up an exchange that need never end. --Critic Rebecca Solnit, quoted in Brainpickings.org
The PC-ness and softening of modern verbal communications has results in a net loss of meaning. We can fix this, if we want. Behind the cut is a good article arguing for awareness of this one particular phrase. "I feel like" is often used to replace the words "I think", and it is not a feeling at all. Feelings, that is emotions, are quite distinct from thoughts and judgements. To be clear in our communications requires that we recognize and communicate that difference.
BE IMPECCABLE WITH YOUR WORD Speak with integrity. Say only what you mean. Avoid using the word to speak against yourself or to gossip about others. Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love.
DON'T TAKE ANYTHING PERSONALLY Nothing others do is because of you. What others say and do is a projection of their own reality, their own dream. When you are immune to the opinions and actions of others, you won't be the victim of needless suffering.
DON'T MAKE ASSUMPTIONS Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really want. Communicate with others as clearly as you can to avoid misunderstandings, sadness and drama.
ALWAYS DO YOUR BEST Your best is going to change from moment to moment; it will be different when you are healthy as opposed to sick. Under any circumstance, simply do your best, and you will avoid self-judgment, self-abuse and regret.
SOURCE: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23861354 Pers Soc Psychol Rev. 2013 Aug;17(3):248-72. doi: 10.1177/1088868313495593. Targeting the good target: an integrative review of the characteristics and consequences of being accurately perceived. Human LJ1, Biesanz JC. Abstract A person's judgeability, or the extent to which a person is easy to understand, plays an important role in how accurately a target will be perceived by others. Research on this topic, however, has not been systematic or well-integrated. The current review begins to remedy this by integrating the available research on judgeability from the fields of personality perception, nonverbal communication, and social cognition. Specifically, this review summarizes the characteristics that are likely to promote judgeability and explores its potential consequences. A diverse range of characteristics are identified as predictors of judgeability, all relating to three broader categories: psychological adjustment, social status, and socialization. Furthermore, being judgeable has a variety of potential, largely positive, consequences for the target, leaving good targets poised for greater personal and interpersonal well-being. Nevertheless, many questions on this topic remain and it is crucial for this relatively understudied topic to receive more systematic empirical attention. KEYWORDS: accuracy; expressivity; judgeability; person perception; well-being PMID: 23861354 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
A common form of complexity is the sophistication of fear.
Long words when short ones will do. Fancy clothes to keep the riffraff out and to give us a costume to hide behind. Most of all, the sneer of, "you don't understand" or, "you don't know the people I know..."
"It's complicated," we say, even when it isn't.
We invent these facades because they provide safety. Safety from the unknown, from being questioned, from being called out as a fraud. These facades lead to bad writing, lousy communication and a refuge from the things we fear.
I'm more interested in the sophistication required to deliver the truth.
Simplicity.
Awareness.
Beauty.
These take fearlessness. This is, "here it is, I made this, I know you can understand it, does it work for you?"
Our work doesn't have to be obtuse to be important or brave.
Seth Godin is a writer, a speaker and an agent of change.
I felt some loneliness the first week I was here. But now, no. I have enough acquaintances to not feel lonely. The landlady, Marie, speaks English and her bf is American. And her niece, Emma, also…
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