Spyke

Siffredi was the first to descend Mount Everest on a snowboard, completing this feat in 2001 via the Norton Couloir.[1][2] In 2002, he disappeared after making his second Everest summit, while attempting to snowboard the Hornbein Couloir; his body has never been found.

dude actually did it once

273
sh.itjust.works

I made a rule for myself because of stuff like this

If you've done something fun but incredibly stupid and got away with it the first time, never do it a second time.

238
lemm.ee

my mantra is "don't tempt fate"

could I e.g. jump off a 3 story building into a pool? probably. but if I'm wrong then I'm either dead or severely injured and will probably regret that jump for the rest of my life.

62
Weirdfishreply
lemmy.world

As someone who's been skateboarding for 40 years, I've almost always had that "This is a bad idea" feeling right before getting a serious injury.

Took longer than I care to admit to start listening to it.

35

Same with dirt bikes and ATVs. Rolled a few and there’s always a point on that too steep hill where you feel the shift and realize oh no, gravity will be making all of the decisions from here on out and I’m just a spectator. I don’t ride nearly as recklessly as I used to.

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ddhreply
lemmy.sdf.org

My kid loves physical fail videos, and there's lots of skateboarding. Some make me curl up in a ball, but I let him watch them because honestly they are pretty instructive.

10
sh.itjust.works

I see where you're coming from. But luck favors the bold. And I would most definitely regret not doing something for the rest of my life

But after the first attempt your no longer bold, just dumb.

-12

luck favors the bold

As my dad used to say, 'The feint of heart never fucked the fair maiden'.

3
slrpnk.net

I am convinced that given enough time, the gene for Tries Crazy Shit and the gene for Has Mad Skills will converge.

8
lemmings.world

Smart. Some people don't know when to quit while they're ahead.

This guy was doomed from the start. He was always going to keep doing this until he failed. If he survived his second attempt, he would have died on his third, or fourth, etc.

I always tell young people, especially young men, that every friend group has that one dangerous guy. He's the one that will hold a firework in his hand, drive like maniac to show off, drink way too much, take weird drugs, etc. Identify that guy early, and watch out for him. Don't let him drive (he's always the first to volunteer), don't encourage his nonsense, and stay far away. He's eventually going to get himself killed, and probably whoever is with him.

RFK, Jr is good example of the type.

6

RFK Junior is 71 years old. That's not your shining example of "eventually gong to get himself killed."

2
lemmy.world

Right? His body was never found, so maybe he reached the bottom and hitched a ride to escape his life and now he's in a monetary somewhere in Nepal leading a quiet, peaceful existence

22

Or maybe it just reached the bottom and got thrown in the trash because the Sherpas ain't got time for dead white boi paperwork

3

this reminds me of people that started winning big at the casino, but left empty handed because they continue playing

28

It’s like winning big money the very first time you try gambling. You ought to quit while you’re ahead, but your judgement is too clouded to actually stop yourself.

20

Is it... is it possible he ran away? Like I've seen documentaries where people disappear only to be found years later across the country. And people be like: dude made a second life, got tired of it and came back.

3

Low self-preservation tendencies, but lots of money, is a bad combination. They can afford to get themselves into a lot of trouble.

9
sopuli.xyz

Anyone have good Sherpa/mountaineering documentary recommendations?

8

This one on K2 was really interesting. It goes in-depth on why K2 is so much more dangerous than Everest and the many failures of the people attempting to be the first to make it to the top.

https://youtu.be/iMFLWoPtSZM

7
lemmy.world

Not exactly what you're looking for, but "Scary Interesting" on youtube has some good mountaineering gone wrong stories. They're typically 10-20 minutes long.

5

I fuckin love that channel. So many late nights watching the 5 worst cave experiences

1

Do you speak German or Dutch? It‘s not a documentary, but Toine Heijmans wrote a spectacular book on mountaineering called Zuurstofschuld. There‘s only a German translation though so far. I read the thing cover-to-cover in three days, best read I‘ve had in a while.

5

Mountain Queen: The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa

More of a biography covering her entire life

4

It's been probably 25 years since I read it and I can still remember what an impression it made.

Big recommend!

1

Good? Stay off the fucking mountain. It's already been littered with human trash and bodies. It's no longer a milestone it's a human trash collector. Fuck him.

-8

It’s no longer a milestone it’s a human trash collector.

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74 183.84reply
lemm.ee

My back muscles are bigger than your mom

0
74 183.84reply
lemm.ee

My main point that I would like to get across here: my back muscles > your mom

Please note that there is no part of this were the two are equal.

1

Thanks for hearing me out, I really needed that. Have a good rest of your day broski

1