Today, I swam the 200 yards free in 2:09.11.
This beats my previous best of 2:09.54 from April 1994.
I challenged the 2:09.54 in the past 11 years, over 20 times, many times under what I learned the hard way to be the wrong preparation, and never came close.
My result will be posted officially in the USMS databse.
I won't be able to make the 2005 Short Course Nationals, but hopefully I will make the 2005 Long Course Nationals.
The reason that I bring this success here is that there are some lessons to learn from it:
1.) to pursue virtue and excellence by meeting the intrinsic requirements that come to having a worthwhile goal (in my case, the goal is to stay in my prime intellectually and physically, for longtime), that's intelligence and tenacious work;
I immigrated to U.S. and relocated within U.S. on job skills in science to live my lifestyle;
this lifestyle comprises now, over 39 weeks of the 2004-2005 season so far, of 1,093 kilometers of training (an average of 28.025 kilometers per week, or 30,828 yards per week, no matter the holidays, tapering or illness, that includes kicking, strokes, and technique quotas), the most mileage I slowly built my late starter physiology up to in life, mostly under a Masters club with primarly college and age group swimming expertise, which I searched for and choosed;
I also cross train consistently in weights and running;
2.) I scrutinize self-indulgence and greed (to an employer who was asking me to work overtime like his Japanese employees do, even though I was ahead in schedule in a project, and who thought that I am a slave to him giving me a work visa, I stated "You know, my life doesn't depend on you." and I walked away from a near six-figures salary because it was jeopardizing my swim training; I looked for and found another) and I scrutinize good intentions backed up by feelings without hard data.
2:09.11 and staying in my prime, that's a tribute to 1.) and 2.).
Former Member
Originally posted by Tom Ellison
Ion:
If you want to stay with the numbers being everything....especially in the area of swimming results....
Perhaps you need to get a few more crutches other then being a late bloomer.....Now, this is not an attack...It is just my thoughts put forth in a decent manner and based on your posts.
Like if you show to know anything.
Anything...
Ion.....if you want to continue with this and your posts....I am ok with that....What I do know.... is that I never used any of my physical limitations as a crutch....and I also know that even with past horrific injuries......I banged away to reach my goals...and the last time I looked....I swam 7 Top Ten Times....1 FINA Int'l Top Ten Time and I won Alcatraz in my age group.....I'd say I know how to work hard, swim smart, goal set....listen to my coaches....and try to be the very best I could REGARDLESS of what I have endured in my lifetime....or when I started back swimming.
Originally posted by Tom Ellison
...What I do know.... is that I never used any of my physical limitations as a crutch....and I also know that even with past horrific injuries...
Ooops.
Ellison is inconsistent.
Originally posted by Tom Ellison
Ion.....if you want to continue with this and your posts....I am ok with that....What I do know.... is that I never used any of my physical limitations as a crutch....and I also know that even with past horrific injuries......I banged away to reach my goals...and the last time I looked....I swam 7 Top Ten Times....1 FINA Int'l Top Ten Time and I won Alcatraz in my age group.....I'd say I know how to work hard, swim smart, goal set....listen to my coaches....and try to be the very best I could REGARDLESS of what I have endured in my lifetime....or when I started back swimming.
Exactly. Your numbers, Tom, speak for themselves. No need to qualify them. Placed in their proper perspective, though, they're even more impressive.
Originally posted by Ion Beza
No need for Ellison here.
You could have said: "Ion, you are right, the best predicator of future behavior is past bevavior."
I am a picture of consistency in goals and means.
In swimming?
That talented people who start swimming at 50, become fast?
Like in 1:49 per 200 free?
No way.
None.
LOL, Ion, you know as well as I do that I meant your behavior, which so many find unacceptable, will not change, you are, if nothing else consistent. Consistency becomes BORING after awhile.
You also misunderstood what I meant when I said I could back up that claim with hard data. It was in a paragraph with, "Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior" Surely, with your great grasp of English (and how many other languages?) you realized I was referring to finding research that looked at past behavior as a predictor of future behavior. Or am I wrong, that ideas related to one another are found in the same paragraph?
I'm outta here.
Lainey
Originally posted by laineybug
...
Consistency becomes BORING after awhile.
...
Lainey
But it gets results.
Like a lifetime best.
And many other results.