
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Today’s guest is Alison Levine, a former Goldman Sachs investor-turned-mountain climber who has climbed the highest mountains on every continent. She’s the author of the NY Times bestselling book On the Edge, and is the executive producer of The Glass Ceiling, a documentary about the first Nepali woman to climb Mt. Everest.
Takeaways from this Episode:
Born with a heart condition, Alison is not a person you would expect would be renowned for leading the first team of American women to climb Mt. Everest together. After her second heart surgery around age 30, Alison found a renewed zest for life and wanted to do something she couldn’t do before. Remembering stories of adventurers that had captivated her in her youth, Alison used frequent flyer miles to hop on a plane to Tanzania and climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro, reaching the summit with a pair of heavy hiking boots and equipment borrowed from friends. The experience was difficult, yet exhilarating for Allison, and as she continued to climb mountains she realized it was about more than just reaching the summit.
“[S]tanding on top of a mountain isn't going to change you and isn't going to change the world. It's really about the lessons you learn along the way.”
Alison didn’t allow her constraints to stop her from achieving the life she wanted, and her story has inspired some unexpected insights within me. Perhaps she’ll inspire some within you, as well.
Show Notes: http://whitneyjohnson.com/alison-levine
By Whitney Johnson4.9
407407 ratings
Today’s guest is Alison Levine, a former Goldman Sachs investor-turned-mountain climber who has climbed the highest mountains on every continent. She’s the author of the NY Times bestselling book On the Edge, and is the executive producer of The Glass Ceiling, a documentary about the first Nepali woman to climb Mt. Everest.
Takeaways from this Episode:
Born with a heart condition, Alison is not a person you would expect would be renowned for leading the first team of American women to climb Mt. Everest together. After her second heart surgery around age 30, Alison found a renewed zest for life and wanted to do something she couldn’t do before. Remembering stories of adventurers that had captivated her in her youth, Alison used frequent flyer miles to hop on a plane to Tanzania and climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro, reaching the summit with a pair of heavy hiking boots and equipment borrowed from friends. The experience was difficult, yet exhilarating for Allison, and as she continued to climb mountains she realized it was about more than just reaching the summit.
“[S]tanding on top of a mountain isn't going to change you and isn't going to change the world. It's really about the lessons you learn along the way.”
Alison didn’t allow her constraints to stop her from achieving the life she wanted, and her story has inspired some unexpected insights within me. Perhaps she’ll inspire some within you, as well.
Show Notes: http://whitneyjohnson.com/alison-levine

1,332 Listeners

21,089 Listeners

2,110 Listeners

3,940 Listeners

6,496 Listeners

822 Listeners

2,703 Listeners

11,026 Listeners

379 Listeners

2,121 Listeners

581 Listeners

20,321 Listeners

324 Listeners

302 Listeners

1,195 Listeners