The foundation of my Survivor, mountain skills didn’t begin on a beach.
They began on the side of the mountain just off Old Daisy Road.
Three ten-year-old boys.
Straight rock formations.
No gear. No helmets. No safety nets.
If it looked climbable, we climbed it.
Not because we were fearless — but because we were curious.
Fear Isn’t the Enemy
When you’re halfway up a rock face with nothing but your hands and boots, you learn something fast:
Fear is real.
Panic is optional.
Those climbs taught:
- How to test each handhold
- How to slow your breathing
- How to move with intention
- How to stay calm when your heart says “don’t”
That’s exactly what Survivor mountain skills require — control under pressure.
Trust Builds Strength
Climbing isn’t just physical. It’s relational.
We called out footholds.
We steadied each other.
We figured out routes together.
You learn quickly that strength isn’t just about muscles. It’s about communication and awareness.
That mountain just off Old Daisy Road didn’t just build endurance.
It built tribe.
Survivor Is About Control
People think Survivor is about brute strength.
It’s not.
It’s about:
- Managing fear
- Conserving energy
- Thinking before moving
- Trusting your people
Those rock faces were our early training ground.
Different setting. Same principles.
Why Those Rocks Still Matter
Every time I picture competing on Survivor, I don’t see palm trees first.
I see stone.
I see dirt under my fingernails.
I see the climb.
I see the lesson.
You don’t eliminate fear.
You climb anyway.
Keep Climbing
Those rock formations just off Old Daisy Road were more than playgrounds. They were training grounds.
The mindset we built out there still shows up today — in business, in competition, and in every challenge that looks bigger than it feels at first glance.
🎥 Want more of the journey?
Check out my YouTube channel here:
👉 https://www.youtube.com/@The74501
📞 Want to connect directly?
👉 Call Me: 918-470-9876
📖 And if you want to learn more about Donnie and the stories that shaped him, check it out here:
👉 https://donnieweddle.com/book/
Every mountain starts with a first step.
FAQ
How did climbing rocks prepare you for Survivor?
It built balance, emotional control, endurance, and trust under pressure.
Why are mountain skills important in Survivor?
Challenges often require focus, body control, and calm decision-making at height.
What’s the biggest lesson from those climbs?
Confidence isn’t the absence of fear — it’s moving forward despite it.
Where did these lessons begin?
On the side of the mountain just off Old Daisy Road in Southeast Oklahoma.