Home Actress Juliane Wurm HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers December 2020 Juliane Wurm Instagram - Sometimes this whole bouldering thing is just so much fun 😍 . Video by @_alexwurm . @mammut_swiss1862 @madrockclimbing Boulderplanet

Juliane Wurm Instagram – Sometimes this whole bouldering thing is just so much fun 😍 . Video by @_alexwurm . @mammut_swiss1862 @madrockclimbing Boulderplanet

Juliane Wurm Instagram - Sometimes this whole bouldering thing is just so much fun 😍 . Video by @_alexwurm . @mammut_swiss1862 @madrockclimbing Boulderplanet

Juliane Wurm Instagram – Sometimes this whole bouldering thing is just so much fun 😍

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Video by @_alexwurm

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@mammut_swiss1862
@madrockclimbing Boulderplanet | Posted on 26/Aug/2020 01:18:17

Juliane Wurm Instagram – Covid-19 hat unser Leben stark verändert. Noch viel stärker sind aber die Mädchen und Jungen in den Plan-Programmländern, wie beispielsweise mein Patenkind Abate in Äthiopien von den langfristigen Auswirkungen der Krise beeinträchtigt. Um diesen Kindern weiterhin die Chance auf ein selbstbestimmtes Leben zu ermöglichen, sammle ich vom ‪28.-30. August‬ #KilometerfürKinderrechte beim Plan International Kilometerzähler.
 
Pro Kilometer, den ich an dem Wochenende der Spendenaktion spaziere (bin Touri-mäßig in Berlin unterwegs), wird meine Kilometerpatin und #kinderbrauchenfans-Botschafterin @ingridklimke einen Euro in die Corona-Nothilfe von Plan spenden. Ingrid, wie viele Kilometer wirst du reiten? 
 
Seid auch dabei, denn jeder Kilometer zählt – mit dem Rad, zu Fuß oder am Fels ;). Anmeldung und Infos im Link in meiner Bio.
 
#planinternationaldeutschland #plandeutschland
Juliane Wurm Instagram – Should we really celebrate successful athletes so much? 
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There are a couple of reasons why I‘m confused by that. One is that competing very much involves focussing on one thing, often oneself, in order to increase individual sports performance. Often this is mostly intrinsically motivated, sometimes the motivation might be rooted somewhere else (which might be prone to creating questionable dependencies).
When I started climbing as a 10y-old-kid, I absolutely fell in love with this way of movement. I seemed to have a talent and was told that consequently I’d probably do well in comps. I had done comps in gymnastics and track&field before and my childhood heroes were successful gymnasts, skiers, runners and soon climbers… Throughout the following years I committed for this comp path and very much enjoyed the lifestyle. I spent most of my time training or thinking about training, climbing and comps and received huge support from my environment. I wasn’t very eager to try hard in school, didn’t care very deeply about other people’s well-being or my social relationships. However, my often egocentric behavior seemed to be justifiable through medals and even seemed to be part of my talent in sports. 
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Ever since I stopped competing, people celebrated me for having been a successful competitor and it has been quite a door-opener for me. Looking back, I’ve surely learned a lot as an athlete and it shaped who I am today, but increasing competitive performance also came with a questionably narrow path to go. In my eyes many of the people we celebrate as our (sports) heroes are good at going this narrow path and ignoring many things and people around unless it might help increasing their performance. I see the point that it’s fascinating to see a (sports) person being so absorbed by something and thus showing incredible performance, but it irritates me that we’re so willing to encourage and celebrate that behavior or that we don’t shed enough light on the ways competitors strive to success in a more holistic and realistic way. I’m not sure if we’re aware of the direction in which comp sports pushes young athletes, imo, a system that in many cases is hard to exit.

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