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Finding Flow: Nina Williams

How this rising star in the bouldering world overcame serious self-doubt to become one of the world鈥檚 best climbers

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There’s more than one way to the top. For a young Nina Williams, her intense desire to succeed as a climber鈥攁nd fear of failure鈥攏early derailed her budding career.聽Back when she was 14, the ultra-competitive Williams forged a signature saying she鈥檇 completed a climb during a national qualifying bouldering competition. She got away with it, and kept forging, until several months later, when she finally got caught and was subsequently banned from competitions for a year. The shame was excruciating for a young climber who thrived on praise, but it also motivated her to come back stronger than ever. In the years since, Williams has quickly developed into one of the world鈥檚 best highball boulderers, meaning she specializes in climbing giant boulders with big consequences if she were to fall.

Fast-forward to 2017, when Williams gained national recognition聽after becoming the first female to send Ambrosia, an iconic 55-foot, V11 route on the largest boulder in the Buttermilks, near Bishop, California. Nowadays, Williams is still chasing many of the world鈥檚 hardest bouldering routes and starting to think about multi-pitch climbs in spots like Yosemite. She also continues to grapple with her need for praise, working hard to ensure that she climbs for herself instead of anyone else.

I started climbing at age 12, when my mom was like 鈥淐hoose one activity. I can鈥檛 afford to keep driving you around all the time.鈥

I was naturally good at climbing right off the bat. I got to go into a gym with different puzzles to figure out. It was a different outlet for my energy, and people gave me all of this external validation. In the beginning, I loved climbing because someone else thought I was good at it.

Climbing made me feel strong. I knew I was strong because I could pull myself up the wall.

Going to nationals was this magical thing in my mind, but at regionals I didn’t have the confidence to think I could make it. You had to climb five routes and have two peers sign off on each problem. I snuck into a bathroom and forged initials. I didn’t get caught; they accepted the scorecard. When I later got caught, I had to write apology letters to several different groups. I was in a dark place, but I got back into climbing as fast as I could.

Looking back, if that hadn’t happened, I wouldn’t be the climber I am today.

I stayed on the team until I aged out, went to college, and stopped climbing for a bit. But I missed it. I felt really sad. I got back into it as fast as I could.

I’d cut pictures out of the climbing magazines that I got鈥擠ave Graham, Chris Sharma, Alex Puccio鈥攏ot knowing that some would become my best friends later on.

In climbing, you not only get to be outside, but also have a support system and a community. No matter where you are in the world, those people will understand you.

Everyone climbs for a different reason, everyone for different experiences. But we鈥檙e all connected by being able to move our bodies in the way and direction that we want.

There are times in our lives when we feel directionless. But if you climb, at least you can control your body up a wall. It may be so small and insignificant, but we can climb up a wall.

I moved from the East Coast to Greeley, Colorado, in 2010. Then from Greeley to Boulder in 2013. Moving to Boulder really impacted my climbing. Everyone there is motivated not just to climb for fun, but for performance. I hadn鈥檛 revisited that concept since my younger climbing days. But training and seeing noticeable gains in my climbing reawakened my competitive聽side.

I鈥檝e primarily bouldered my whole climbing life. I鈥檝e started highball bouldering鈥攖he really tall stuff鈥攚ithin the past five years.

I got into highballs because they鈥檙e dangerous and exciting. It requires a different skill set鈥攁 mental strength that I hadn’t yet honed. The point is to achieve that perfect flow state, but in order to achieve it, you have to go through the jarring, erratic uncertainties first.

Highballing is a subcategory of bouldering. It鈥檚 something people do on the side of bouldering. There is a small, small group that pursues highballing.

My first highball was V9 Footprints. It鈥檚 on the first boulder you see from the road going into the Buttermilks. I鈥檇 seen a picture and it looks really tall and scary. The hardest part is a move near the ground, with another 35 feet of 5.10 climbing. But when I saw it in person, it wasn鈥檛 as tall and scary as I had made it out to be.

鈥”But when I saw it in person, it wasn’t as tall and scary as I had made it out to be.鈥

On Footprints, I was like, Oh, I鈥檓 at the lip. Oh, I鈥檓 at the headwall. And then, oh, I鈥檓 here鈥擨鈥檓 sending it.

That same trip, I put a rope on Ambrosia. I tried the moves and I was so scared. I thought, This is a pipe dream. But subconsciously, I thought, I鈥檝e done Footprints, I鈥檝e done Evolution Direct [on the same boulder]鈥擜mbrosia represents the third face.

I left and didn’t think about Bishop for the whole next year.

I didn’t want to admit to myself that I wanted to try Ambrosia. In 2016, I did a six-week training cycle, and the entire time I said, I鈥檓 just training to get stronger, just to have a fun trip to Bishop.

I didn’t want to psych myself out. I didn’t want any pressure. I went in thinking, We鈥檒l just see what happens.

It was just my boyfriend, a few friends, and a bunch of pads in case I didn’t send.

I got to a point when I just knew I was going complete the climb without a rope. I was in a flow state, but it was because I鈥檇 been there already. It was years of climbing, years of experience, and a lot of knowledge about how to fall.

I鈥檝e been in that state a lot, not just on highballs but when I鈥檓 sending any hard problem. In order to climb at such an elite level, you really have to be able to climb things perfectly. When you鈥檙e at your limit, you need 100 percent of your energy to have the strength.

That climb tied back to my youth, because all I鈥檇 wanted back then was for people to be proud of me.

My message for anyone trying to achieve their goals and to achieve the flow state is: Learn about yourself and love yourself. We live in an age where we just want to be ourselves and live our most authentic lives. But if you think about it, the best way to care for other people is to point yourself in a direction to where you can truly be yourself, and that reflects on others.

I don鈥檛 want the next generation of climbers to feel like they have to cheat or be ultra-achieving. I want us to speak to them and say, We鈥檙e proud of you because you鈥檙e doing this for yourself.


aims to connect with all outdoor creators. These are the people who find their flow in the outdoors 鈥搘hether trail running, mountain biking, climbing, or fast hiking. When in this flow, they are at their most creative and progress beyond their own expectations. We want to inspire this community to get outside and discover they can do more than they thought they were capable of. From the highest highs to the lowest lows, how do you find your flow?聽

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