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Dover-English Channel PORT

Dover-English Channel PORT

Monday, October 4, 2010

swimming.about.com/od/sportpsychology/a/joyofswimming.htm

The Joy of Swimming

What makes you get to the swimming pool for your workout?

From Roman Mica, Everyman Triathlon
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Apr 17 2009
There is a special moment when I first get in the water and push off the wall that I use to get myself to the swimming pool. It feels just like flying. I’m completely submerged, weightless gliding through the silky water. The only sound is that of the bubbles as they rush past my ears. The outside world is completely gone. It is just me, my own thoughts, and the gentle warm water as it slips past my skin. This moment is complete and full of promise. It lacks nothing and wants nothing. But all too soon it runs out, like my breath, when I burst above the water and take my first stroke. I think of this moment on these cold Colorado mornings when it would be so much easier to stay in bed and sleep a few more precious minutes.
The problem is, of course, a basic one. It takes so much more mental energy to get to the pool than it does to run or bike. To run or bike, all you really have to do is put on your gear and head out the door. That’s it. Perhaps the refrigerator and the promise it holds might distract you, but if you can avoid the kitchen, you are well on your way.
But swimming is a completely different animal. You not only have to avoid the kitchen, but make it to the pool, pack all your gear, get changed, ignore the siren call of the hot tub, and jump into the cold water. As President Bush might put it, you’ve just spent a lot of your workout capital.
I go swim at a local masters class a few times a week. I find that unless I have a coach I really don’t have much workout capital left to motivate myself to swim. With a coach and a few lane buddies I’m forced to push myself.
Do you know what L2 (L squared) means? Long and Lovely - that’s what my coach likes to see when we swim. There is a swimmer’s vocabulary I had to learn when I first began swimming.
As always I like to set-the bar low. When I swim I use a simple guide; “Try not to suck.” I know that’s not really positive motivation, but for us non life-long swimmers it will have to do, especially when you’re next to a lane of master collegiate swimmers. Because these aquamen and women are fast. They have an effortless stroke that I admire as they glide through the water at tremendous speed.
Now theoretically, I’m supposed to be able to able to swim at about ten different speeds (From easy to 10, 20 and all the way up to 100 percent effort)
However I find I only have three speeds:
  1. Easy: This is the speed I swim at for 90 percent of the time. It consists of a stroke that somewhat resembles the idea freestyle form but is about 90 percent slower than most swimmers in the pool. It does have one big advantage. That being that I can breath. The other two speeds lack this essential swim technique and that’s why I seldom use them.
  2. Fast: This is the speed I use when the coach says swim 50-yards easy and 50-yards fast or 50-yards build, or 50-yards negative split, or 50-yards at a strong effort, or 50 yards over kick or 50 yards at 90 percent. My fast speed actually consists of two speed settings:
    • The first 25-yards or so is what you might actually consider fast. Just for your information, about the speed of a motivated penguin waddle.
    • The second 25-yards consists of a lot of thrashing and flailing and heavy breathing but little forward progress, about the speed and direction of very drunk penguin.
  3. Fasy: Fasy is speed somewhere in between fast and easy. Properly defined it is the speed that I swim after a fast swim. It is a rebuilding speed that gets me back to easy. It is not the thrashing and flailing and heavy breathing of a fast stroke but it is also not yet the relaxed “I’m able to breath” speed of the easy stroke…but it is getting there. It is fasy.
What I find really fascinating about swimming is how different it looks from above the water than it feels like in the water. For instance, at my top speed I feel like I’m powering through the water like superman soaring through the heavens. But if I were to look at myself from the above the water, I would look like I’m out for a leisurely Sunday morning swim.
One day I told this to a lane buddy of mine and he said that it was because water is 900 times denser than air. That seemed like a reasonable explanation until I was out running hard and I was passed by one of the local elite runners like I was on a meandering stroll. It seems the real explanation is the obvious one, I swim like I run: Fasy. Which reminds me of a workout I had the other day...