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<p>Picture this: you’re ice climbing. Now picture doing it… without fingers on one of your hands. Sounds nearly impossible, right? Well today, I sit down with Kimber Cross, a kindergarten teacher, adaptive athlete, and living embodiment of her own personal motto: <em>Can’t. Will. Did.</em></p><p>Born without fingers on her right hand, Kimber grew up doing all the “normal” sports and activities—fully adapting to the world around her. But when she discovered ice climbing, for the first time, she hit a wall. How do you climb vertical ice without a second ice axe?</p><p>In true Kimber fashion, she reached out to a prosthetist, and together they designed a custom prosthetic ice tool that allowed her to return to the ice on the sharp end.</p><p>Fast forward to today—Kimber is pursuing professional climbing, setting bold goals like the <em>Moose’s Tooth</em> in Alaska. She’s inspiring those around her through grit, vision, and a refusal to let anything hold her back.</p><p>In our conversation...