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On top of the world: Nims explains how he believed in himself, when almost no one else did

His new book about his extraordinary record in the mountains isn’t just about how he climbed over rocks – it’s about how we can all do things we used to think were impossible.

We’re going to the mountains this week, for news of an amazing human achievement. And not just any mountains, but the highest mountain range in the world – the Himalayas, between India and China.

It’s often called “The Roof of the World”. Including Mount Everest, the highest point on Earth, there are 14 Himalayan mountains over 8,000 metres high.

La chaîne de montagnes de l'Himalaya
Mount Everest: The highest point in the world, at 8,848 metres

That’s 8 kilometres above sea level. Up there, it’s not only freezing (minus 20, even in summer!), there’s very little air – about a third of what we’re used to.

“Your head feels like it’s bursting and you’re gasping for air.”


A mountaineer on climbing EveresT

Meet Nims

So, here we are, on top of the world. And who do we meet? Well, meet Nims.

Nims – or Nirmal Purja as his parents named him – climbed every one of those 14 summits last year. He called his adventure “Project Possible”.

Nirmal Purja
Nanga Parbat, another conquest for Nims
Photo: Mingma David Sherpa/Project Possible

Project Possible? It doesn’t seem a very exciting name, does it? But you need to know that nearly everyone told Nims it was impossible. The record for climbing all 14 “eight-thousanders” was 7 years. Nims said he would take 7 months.

“No one believed it could be done,” he said afterwards. “Some people made a joke out of it.”

The book of possible

Since conquering the last of the 14 a year ago, Nims has been writing a book. It’s just been published. He called it Beyond Possible. It’s not really about mountaineering, he says, but to help us see we can all do amazing things if we follow our dreams.

I hope that people feel inspired to work on their impossible, to make it possible.

Nims Purja

In his book, Nims  describes his childhood in a poor village in Nepal, the country between India and China where some of the highest mountains are. He says “positive thinking” helped him pass exams and be good at sports. It meant keeping on trying, even when he couldn’t do something at first.

Nirmal Purja avec ses parents
Nirmal Purja with his parents
Photo: Ganga Bahadur Purja

When he was 18, he joined the Gurkhas – Nepalese soldiers in the British army – and became an expert in surviving in extreme conditions. “You’re taught to come up with solutions,” Nims says.

Find your thing

A few years ago, he started to climb the high mountains back home in Nepal for the first time He discovered that his body adapted to the lack of air better than most other people. “This is my thing!” he remembers thinking as he raced happily uphill.

So, then he dreamed of breaking the record. He thought it would be good for his country, Nepal; he wanted to encourage people to look after the Earth and its wild places, like the mountains; and he wanted to help us all reach for our dreams.

My purpose was to show the world that you have to do what you love doing – and that nothing is impossible.

NIMS PURJA

Achieving the record was hard. There were times Nims thought he might not make it. He just had to keep putting one foot in front of another. It was dangerous. He fell. And he even rescued other mountaineers, slowing himself down. But he did it.

Watch Nims in the mountains!

Going up mountains isn’t for everyone. But, says Nims, “we all have mountains to climb”, even if, for some people, their “mountain” right now might just be learning a new subject, or perhaps making friends in a new school.

For Nims, climbing the mountains was the easy part: “Writing the book was harder!” he told the Nepalese newspaper The Kathmandu Post.

Now he’s preparing for his next dream, in a few weeks – to be the first person to climb the world’s second highest mountain, K2, in winter. Watch this space!

Cover photo: Nims at the summit of Makalu / Credit: Geljen Sherpa/Project Possible

Problem?

We can all feel  frustrated when we can’t do something well. Or we can feel unhappy that we’re not doing things we like. Those feelings can make us feel tired and miserable.

 

Solution!

Stop and listen to yourself, try to feel what it is that makes you feel GREAT; find what you love and you have huge power to get good at it! That will give you strength to do other things, too.

Adults Info

“We all have mountains to climb” is a key quote from Nims Purja’s interview in The Kathmandu Post, one of the sources for the article. He’s an inspiring figure, not just for people who want to climb real mountains, but for all children, who face all kinds of challenges, physical, mental or emotional.

 

This article encourages them to think about the energy to be tapped at the point where their strengths and talents intersect with whatever they love doing. We don’t expect WoW! readers to be making serious life plans (yet!), but it’s not too early to start reflecting on how to recognise what makes us tick – think of that moment, wading uphill through deep snow, when Nims says to himself: “This is my thing!”

 

There’s more from the mountaineer in this interview in The Guardian. It also deals with some controversy around his approach. Some mountaineers have sniffed at his use of oxygen tanks, but Reinhold Messner, who in 1986 became the first to climb all 14 8,000-metre peaks, has hailed Nims’ “unique achievement”.

 

The book is available, including in digital format, from publisher Hodder & Stoughton.

 

There’s a full interview with Nims from his sponsor, watchmaker Bremont, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ricz_Vj-pQY and with Britain’s Sky News: https://youtu.be/xzhF4v2IMXk

 

The WOW! reporters