I think it is sad we have slipped down the slope we call “being civil”. Being away from these posts for the better part of a week has allowed me to look at them in a different light then before. The thoughts and feelings of many of the people who post here are very raw right now. Decency, understanding, compassion, patience and kindness have been lost to pain and anger.
I have learned some very valuable lessons over the past nineteen months. Often, anger is directly driven by pain. I read pain into many of the post here. People have offended one another and tramped on each others toes and people have been hurt emotionally.
Gosh, I am the farthest thing from a counselor or referee for that matter, but I am qualified to say that each of us has good days, and each of us has bad days. Without exception, EVERY SINGLE POSTER was decent, understanding and compassionate towards me during a very tough time in my life. Ion has a way of invoking anger and hostility in people. Having said that, he reached out to me during a very tough time and demonstrated a very different and compassionate side then the one we see here.
My point, in the final annalists we call life, what more do we really have then one another? We are a body of swimmers who share a common bond for the love of swimming and adult exercise in the water. Let us keep to this course as opposed to offending one another and fracturing our beloved sport with pain, hard feelings and anger. We are different, yet, we are the same. We all love our children, we all want to excel in life, we all want to think of ourselves are winners, we all want to be free people, we all want to raise our families and enjoy life as best we can. Regardless of how fast we are, how smart we are or anything else…. in the final toll….we all want and strive for many of the same things. As we all did on playgrounds all over the world as children, let’s shake hands and make up….
Parents
Former Member
I did my first pool mile ever last week (in a race that is). I am curious to those who are experienced: Assuming the conditions are good, how much slower is an open water mile vs pool mile (which isn't really a mile). My mile time was 18:37 (1:07.7 per hunrdred, so a real mile (1760 Yards) would have been right at 20 Minutes. And in a college practice I did 3500 yards in 40 Minutes / 25 seconds.
Thoughts...
I did my first pool mile ever last week (in a race that is). I am curious to those who are experienced: Assuming the conditions are good, how much slower is an open water mile vs pool mile (which isn't really a mile). My mile time was 18:37 (1:07.7 per hunrdred, so a real mile (1760 Yards) would have been right at 20 Minutes. And in a college practice I did 3500 yards in 40 Minutes / 25 seconds.
Thoughts...