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Chinese Zhang Hong is the first blind person from Asia to climb Everest
Zhang Hong, who grew up in China's rural countryside, caring for his dad and uncle who were blinded by glaucoma. At the age of 21, he lost his sight, too, But is now the first man in whole Asia to climb the Mount Everest. climb Everest
Inspired by Erik Weihanmayer, the first blind person to summit Everest 20 years prior, Zhang Hong started a few years ago training his body to prepare for the climb.
Every day, he’d strap on a heavy bag and climb 100 flights of stairs at the hospital where he and his wife work as massage therapists, the World reported.
This couldn’t fully prepare him for the challenge of climbing Everest — during a pandemic — and at the age of 46. Once they started the ascent, Zhang said the biggest challenge was the weather.
The World stated that Zhang Hong said, It was very dangerous, “The weather was very bad. My guide kept telling me soon, soon, but all I felt was fear. Part of me wanted to give up and part of me wanted to keep going.”
His guide, Qiangzi, talked him through the entire final ascent, which took them more than 13 hours in low-oxygen conditions. climb Everest
“I didn’t know where my next step will be, and I didn’t know the ice condition,” Zhang said. “I didn’t know where to put my feet, how to stay balanced. I had to depend on my guide’s directions every step of the way. It was very hard.”
According to Zhang Hong, climbing blind has one advantage — you can’t see the danger around you.
“My guide kept telling me it would be just another half-hour, another half-hour, but it seemed to be so long,” he said. “I thought he was lying to me. Then he told me it was just the last bit of rope. Even when he told me there’s the summit up ahead, I didn’t really believe him.”
“Then my guide told me, you made it to the summit,” Zhang said. “I only believed him after he said it a few times.”
Most climbers describe reaching the summit by what they can see — the curve of the Earth, the mountain peaks, the wispy clouds below them. climb Everest
A video posted on Twitter captured him standing among the Tibetan prayer flags at the peak.
“The wind was beating my head,” he said. “It was like a monster. I was absolutely terrified. There was none of the excitement I expected to feel. All I could feel was the wide-open space and the sound of the wind. It was so stressful.”
Over a walkie-talkie, he and his team shared congratulations with a documentary film crew that had been following him.
“I told my guide, let’s take a photo and quickly go down,” he said. “I was only at the top for about five minutes.”
But, he said, reaching the top of Mount Everest was never the goal.
“Reaching the peak, you’re only halfway there,” he said. “It’s not the way up to the top where most mountain climbers get into trouble, it’s on the way back down, so I knew I hadn’t succeeded yet.”
He said that sense of accomplishment only came days later when he made it off the mountain. climb Everest
Source: The World
Image source:Fan Lixin/EyeSteelFilm-The World
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