Two climbers, a broken leg, a knife, and 8 days of impossible choices on a Peruvian mountain — Touching the Void is the ultimate survival story, and it holds more business lessons than most business books.
In May of 1985, two young British climbers: Joe Simpson, age 25, and Simon Yates, age 21 they set out to do something no one had ever done: climb the West Face of Siula Grande, a 21,000-foot peak in the remote Peruvian Andes. No sponsors. No film crew. No rescue team. Just two guys, their gear, and a 4,500-foot wall of ice going almost straight up.
They made the summit. And that's when everything fell apart.
On the descent, Joe fell and shattered his leg, the impact driving the bones of his lower leg straight up through his knee at 19,000 feet. In that moment, both men knew the truth: Joe should have been a dead man. No helicopter was coming. No radio to call for help. The closest village was 28 miles away.
What happened next is one of the most extraordinary survival stories ever told and one of the most powerful business lessons you'll ever hear.
Simon refused to leave his partner. He rigged a lowering system using 300 feet of rope and began lowering Joe down the mountain on his stomach, 150 feet at a time. For hours, this system worked beautifully. Two climbers who had shifted from climbing to rescue, operating as a partnership under maximum pressure. But then Joe slid over a hidden cliff and dropped into a crevasse, leaving him hanging in the void with no way to climb back up. Simon, being slowly dragged off the mountain by Joe's weight, frostbitten and running out of time, made the coldest decision in mountaineering history.
He cut the rope.
Simon's decision mirrors what John D. Rockefeller did when he cut ties with the Clark Brothers partners who were holding him back from building Standard Oil. Both men made the call rationally, calmly, with full understanding of the consequences. Sometimes in business, the thing you're holding onto is the thing that's killing you. Cut the rope.
But Joe didn't die. He fell 100 feet into the crevasse and landed on a snow bridge. Alone, with a destroyed leg, no food, no water, and no one coming to save him, Joe spent the next 96 hours crawling his way back to base camp six miles across glaciers, crevasses, and boulder fields, moving six inches at a time.
What kept him alive was a pattern: place the axe, lift the foot, brace, hop. Over and over. Hundreds of times. He broke the impossible journey into tiny goals, reach that rock in 20 minutes, cross this field by dark, find water before nightfall. When he hit each goal, it was pure delight. When he missed, pure failure. But he never stopped making choices.
Joe discovered two voices battling inside his mind what he called "the voice" that gave him clear instructions and never steered him wrong, and "the other mind" that rambled, wanted to quit, and wasted hours in dreamlike stupors. This is the same voice that Mickey Singer spent decades studying in meditation. Joe met it in a crevasse. Same teacher, different classroom.
Along the way, this story connects to founders we've covered throughout the show: Elon Musk rallying SpaceX after three failed rockets with the words "Build it, and fly it"; H.J. Heinz rebuilding from bankruptcy with nothing but a positive outlook and less than a thousand dollars; Kent Taylor hearing "no" 130 times before Texas Roadhouse became reality. The pattern is always the same: when the cards are terrible, keep playing them.
Joe finally crawled into base camp on his eighth day, delirious, emaciated, and covered in filth from the camp latrine. Simon found him in the dark, pulled him into his arms, and brought him back to life.
Before Joe fell asleep that night, he said five words to Simon that carry the weight of everything: "You saved my life, you know."
This is a story about survival, partnership, choice, and the fire that burns inside deeply driven people, whether they're on a mountain or building a business.
Pick up a copy of Touching the Void using the link below. If you use that link, you'll be helping to support children's literacy.
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