I so dearly wish I could post this as anonymous, but I guess none of you really know me, anyway, so here goes. I am not really superstitious, but I have found that by tracking my biorhythms, I can pretty much predict how my swimming performance will be. I suffer from what I lovingly call "melancholy" and have noted, often times in retrospect, that my bluest days happen to coincide with my emotional cycle on the bottom. Now, since we all know that swimming is 90% mental, I try to avoid spending money that could be better used elsewhere, on going to out of town meets, when I have a fairly good chance of not doing so well. (Granted this is a new observation, not one I have practiced most of my life.) If the meet fell on a "bad" weekend, and it was local, it wouldn't matter, I'd go & swim & just do my best. But since I'm a working girl now, I have to plan things out way ahead to get time off, hotel reservations, someone to take care of the cat & dog, etc., so the last year or so I've also been checking my biorhythms.
So here's the question. If you really feel like you want to go to a meet (obviously emotions are not at the bottom when having these great feelings!!) but you can see ahead that your biorhythms are going to be "so so" - would you spend the money to go out of town for a, most likely, "so so" performance? It just seems like its been sooooo long since I was able to get to a meet! (But I guess I could save the $500 for Nationals. . . . . ) :blush:
(small aside here - it's not like I'm on a team & will have fun companionship with team members)
I saw a CHiPs epsiode once about biorhythms........anyway, I know I have swam pretty good when not feeling up to the job. I would not worry to much. I pay more attention to how the swim feels than the time. If I felt good and made it look pretty, I'm ok with that. Sometimes if I swim fast but I know it looked like a mess, I am less happy.
I saw a CHiPs epsiode once about biorhythms........anyway, I know I have swam pretty good when not feeling up to the job. I would not worry to much. I pay more attention to how the swim feels than the time. If I felt good and made it look pretty, I'm ok with that. Sometimes if I swim fast but I know it looked like a mess, I am less happy.