Climb past your own shadows. Most people choke early — how far can YOU rise?
Get your read — free on iPhoneYou climbed well past where most people choke. The shadows were thick and the platforms were mean and you still found the next foothold. A little higher and you're at the summit. The Eye noticed you don't rattle easy.
That was a short trip up. The first real gap or the first shadow caught you and back down you came. No shame — the climb is harder than it looks and the curve bites early. The Eye is curious whether you'll dust off and try again. Most of the best climbers started right here.
The height got to you a little. The jumps got jittery and a shadow probably ended it sooner than you'd like. But you climbed — and that counts. The Eye has watched plenty of people refuse to even start. Run it back; you'll go higher.
You climbed into the thin air where almost no one goes. Platforms vanished, shadows swarmed, gravity got greedy — and you kept rising. This is rare composure: the higher the stakes, the calmer you get. The Eye has seen a lot of climbers crack at this altitude. You didn't.
You found a rhythm and held it. No panic, no flailing — just one good jump after another until the difficulty finally bit. That steadiness is its own kind of skill. The Eye trusts a climber who doesn't rush.
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