No question about it, a physicist would immediately describe the situation as a pendulum. So if one really wants to give this effect a name, I suggest “pendulum effect.â€
However, I don’t have an understanding of why we would want to name it: It seems to me that we name things so we can have a “shorthand tag†to assign to them so we don’t have to use a lot of words each time we want to identify the subject. For example, we use the acronym RADAR instead of saying “radio detection and ranging.†But we couldn’t stop there because we would have to define that “radio†is “a means by which data or information is transmitted by a wireless electromagnetic method . . . .†Then we would have to define all the other words until we got back to root words that everyone understood.
If, indeed, “pendulum effect†need be referred to many times, it probably should be named. I just don’t see the application.
This makes me wonder how many more things we’ll believe it is necessary to name. For example, should we name the situation where, after climbing for a few minutes, we become tired and have to stop for a breather? After all, that happens frequently (at least it does at my age). Because that happens a lot, maybe we really should name it. How about calling that the “GISAP†(pronounced “giss-app†(with a soft “gâ€)) effect? That stands for “gee, I sure am pooped.â€
The GISAP is to be differentiated from “GIALBT†(gee, I’m a little bit tired.†The latter occurs only when we’re climbing alone. As we all know, when we’re climbing alone, we’ll probably stop when we get a little tired. But when climbing with someone else, we don’t want to admit that we’re tired, so keep pressing on so as to outlast whomever else we’re climbing with. (We could call it the “ME†(macho effect), but that’s too simple.)
I am most willing to present a few dozen more of these doubtless necessary terms for your consideration. I know I’ll receive many requests.
This brings me to one I thought of upon awakening this morning (tree climbing is forever in my mind): We earlier discussed the acronym “TIP,†which I recommended instead of “anchor point†or something like that. I now have changed my mind. TIP is accurate for SRT (is it okay to use that term, or has it been banned yet?), but for DdRT (now I’m really in trouble), it is not a tie-in point: We’re not tied there.
So, for DdRT, I suggest the acronym “BTYHYRA,†which, I’m sure you already have recognized, stands for “branch that you have your rope across.†Now I know that one--or maybe two--of you who are so very contrary will be shouting, “But how would you pronounce that?!†Obviously, it is pronounced “bitty-high-ra.†In daily use, we would, for example, say to the beginning climber we are instructing, “See that branch about 35 feet up, on the left--the one that slopes up at about 30 degrees? Use that as your BTYHYRA.†Now, isn’t that much easier and more accurate? Not only have you told him/her where to place the throw line, you also have told him/her to use DdRT instead of some other method.
So I’m truly stoked and ready for more terms! Here’s one more: For some time now, some of you have been thinking of “WDYSUAJC--(pronounced “widdy-sue-a-jack)--(“why don’t you shut up and just climbâ€)?
Peace.
Jim