I think it’s important we share those positive stories, and we know that there is a choice. She knows not every climber can keep climbing through pregnancy, but wants people to know that for others, “it is possible. “The idea that someone would stop doing something they absolutely love because of the judgment it’s so sad we’re in a position where that happens still.” “One of my good friends, who is incredibly strong and confident, stopped climbing because she couldn’t be bothered with the judgment and the funny looks she got in her late pregnancy,” says Coxsey. But she had also seen the reaction other women have faced. For a start, she says, with nearly 450,000 Instagram followers, she knows social media “is a place where you’re going to get criticised, regardless of what you say”. Her decision drew criticism – as she knew it would – and she was forced to hit back at the online “bullying”. The British Olympic climber has scaled climbing walls and rocks throughout her pregnancy, and videos shared on her Instagram account show her making her way gracefully and powerfully upwards, in control of her body, as she switches holds to accommodate her growing bump. T he week her baby is due, Shauna Coxsey is, as usual, at her local climbing centre in Sheffield.