Everest 2013: Interview with Nelson Dellis – Memory Champion

This interview with Nelson Dellis  is one of an ongoing series I do each season with Everest climbers. Not the famous, sponsored ones who get plenty of publicity but the regular people, who often have full time jobs, full time families and climb for the love of the climb. I welcome suggestions for anyone climbing in 2013 I should interview. Now here’s Nelson: Whenever someone tells Nelson they have trouble remembering names, he nods, smiles gently and tells them he once had that problem but recently memorized a deck of cards in 30 seconds. Oh, and so can you! Who is this mental giant? Truth be told, he is just a normal guy living in Florida who has taken on the world of memory for all the right reasons. And his favorite food is the Goji Berry, well actually its pizza for this 29 year-old. I first met Nelson on Everest (where else?). I was climbing to my tent high on the Lhotse Face when I heard my name. In my oxygen deprived state I looked around only see a smiling face waving to me from his tent. I managed a wave back and mumbled something about climbing on. I remember his face but not his name at that point … Nelson went on reach the Hillary Step but stopped short of the summit. More on that in a moment. We also share something else – Alzheimer’s in our family. Nelson lost his grandmother to the disease in 2009. It changed his life. He set out to better understand how our brain works, specifically memories and found that anyone can improve their memory skills. Now he is a champion in memory contests winning the 2011 and 2012 USA Memory Championship – an Olympiad for ‘thinking’ games. The competition is set up as a sporting event for Mental Athletes, with memory challenging tournament-style competitive events including memorization of: 117 names and faces, a shuffled deck of cards, an unpublished poem, speed numbers, and a list of 500 words. Born in London, his family moved to Florida when he was eleven. Now he is off to Everest, climbing the north side with Phil Crampton’s Altitude Junkies team. Please meet Nelson Dellis. Q: I want to start with Alzheimer’s and your Climb for Memory non-profit. Please tell us about your grandmother and how her Alzheimer’s changed you. My grandmother was the sweetest lady ever, but she passed away in 2009 due to complications related to Alzheimer’s Disease. After she passed, I was inspired to learn more about the memory and to see if there was anything I could do for my own brain so that maybe I wouldn’t suffer the same fate. One of the first things I discovered was the USA Memory Championship, a competition where people come together to memorize massive amounts of pointless information in a very short time. What impressed me the most about the competition was the fact that everyone who competed did not have a naturally good memory. Rather, they all had learned some memory techniques and simply trained their mind to do these incredible feats of memory (like memorize a deck of cards, 100s of digits, etc). As soon as I tried the techniques and saw that they worked, I was hooked. I kept training and training, always learning more about how my memory works and how to make it stronger and healthier. It’s now almost 4 years since then, and I feel like my brain is incredibly strong. Along the way, I decided to start a non-profit called Climb For Memory. I wanted to do 2 things: 1. raise awareness for Alzheimer’s Disease by doing something interesting and 2. find a way to spread my knowledge of brain health to as many people as possible. Climb For Memory made sense because I love climbing and thought that bringing the cause to some of the most beautiful and highest places in the world, might be a great way to gain some attention. You can learn more about my charity here where I also blog frequently about a lot of things memory related. Q: As the winner of several US Memory Championships, you are quite the celebrity on TV these days (CNN, Today Show, Dr. Oz, etc.). What is your message? My main message for people is that you shouldn’t just be satisfied with being physically fit – being mentally fit is equally important. I want people to know that mental health is something that can be achieved with some daily mental exercise, healthy diet, and physical exercise. Q: Everest. In 2011 you reached the Hillary Step and turned back. That was so close. What happened? ARGH! SO close. 280 vertical feet close, actually. I felt so strong that whole 2 month expedition. Even as we left for the summit at 8pm on May 12th, 2011, I felt unstoppable. When we reached The Balcony in just under 4 hours, I was feeling fantastic. But when we took a rest, drank some water, changed my bottled oxygen, and then put my oxygen mask back on to continue climbing, I realized that it had frozen and I couldn’t breathe properly through it (I was getting the supplemental oxygen, but no outside air). I panicked. I eventually figured out a way to breathe by creating an opening at the bottom of the mask, but it was pretty much me just breathing entirely the outside air and hardly any supplemental oxygen. Anyways, I climbed up to the South Summit with this issue and felt myself rapidly becoming insanely tired. And then suddenly I hit a wall. By the time I was about to go up the Hillary Step, I felt like I had nothing more to give, especially considering that I still had to save some energy for the descent. I remember being very “out of it” at that point, so I knew I had to make the decision to turn around quickly. So I did….it was seriously one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do. I