Some beginner questions: What kind of cross-training do you do? 2. How to find goggle

Former Member
Former Member
s that actually work and do not leave deep rings around the eyes? My training goes like this at this point: Mon: run 1 or 2 miles on treadmill swim 1 hour w/coach Tues: longer run or other aerobic exercise for about an hour weight training for about an hour Wed: same as Monday Thurs: same as Tuesday Friday: run for an hour swim (no coach and much less disciplined) about 45 minutes Sat: core work for an hour (Pilates) Sun: often no time to workout at all, sometimes an hour run or aerobics class Thanks for your thoughts!
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ....and yes my coach is terrifying me by suggesting I swim at a meet. It is nice to have goals! But I am still one foot in front of the other, trying to get across the pool and back and remain alive.... Do the meet. Your teammates will love you to death and no one at the meet (worth their salt) will care if you are a “super swimmer” or not. If anything you will get a lot more respect than the other swimmers because everyone there knows it takes a lot more guts to go to a meet the first time around. For every person that shows up not bursting with confidence, there are a lot more people who don’t even bother to try. It takes guts, and the people who matter most know it. Once you go I think you will love it, I know I do and I almost never beat anybody. But those times that I do are oh so sweet! If you have a competitive edge to your personality swimming is a great way to get your ya-ya’s out ‘cause you are mostly competing against yourself (especially in heats for masters, which are typically grouped by time and not age). It is never too early to start collecting times, and you may only get one opportunity per year per course (SCY, LCM, SCM) to accumulate official times, so you may as well start now. Starting to collect times early will also give you a better point of reference for your improvement. I eventually got to the point where I selected events by which ones were the least popular, that way I’d score more points (which is one of the reasons your team will love you for showing up and racing). This strategy also gave me a lot of inspiration to learn butterfly, which I'm now very grateful for. I get my goggles from Kiefer too http://www.kiefer.com/ The products and quality are consistent, and I always know where to find them. I like all the Kiefer brand products I’ve tried and get the goggles with silicon gaskets that have good peripheral vision (for backstroke). Their prescription goggles are very reasonably priced and are nearly identical in style to my regular goggles, so it is pretty easy to switch between the two. I find a good fitting pair of goggles with silicon gaskets are the least offensive for leaving marks around my eyes. “Good fitting” is the key here... if they are too tight they are going to leave a mark no matter what. I bought a pair of barracudas once, I thought they sucked, what a total waste of money (but that’s just me). - - - As for guts, listen to this: I was in the middle of a meet checking out the (so far) posted results when I overheard a woman behind me telling someone she’d learned to swim less than two years earlier. (Huh!?) It was kind of crowed and boisterous on that part of the deck and I didn’t trust my hearing, so when she’d finished her conversation I chatted her up a bit (she was really cute too, which didn’t hurt either). Turns out she really had never learned to swim (she was about 30). Her adolescent daughter was learning to swim, so she figured it was about time that she do the same. She was an athlete, was into body sculpting, but blew out her knee and her doctor told her all she could do safely now was swim (so that was additional motivation to learn). I watched her swim at meets for about two years (I’ve since moved from that region). She was by no means the fastest fish in the pond, but she kept showing up and doing it. I thought she had a lot of raw nerve. She got LOTS of support from her team too (which was usually the biggest team at meets). They would cheer her on during her swims to a level that you generally had to suspend conversation. It seemed like a win-win situation all the way around to me.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ....and yes my coach is terrifying me by suggesting I swim at a meet. It is nice to have goals! But I am still one foot in front of the other, trying to get across the pool and back and remain alive.... Do the meet. Your teammates will love you to death and no one at the meet (worth their salt) will care if you are a “super swimmer” or not. If anything you will get a lot more respect than the other swimmers because everyone there knows it takes a lot more guts to go to a meet the first time around. For every person that shows up not bursting with confidence, there are a lot more people who don’t even bother to try. It takes guts, and the people who matter most know it. Once you go I think you will love it, I know I do and I almost never beat anybody. But those times that I do are oh so sweet! If you have a competitive edge to your personality swimming is a great way to get your ya-ya’s out ‘cause you are mostly competing against yourself (especially in heats for masters, which are typically grouped by time and not age). It is never too early to start collecting times, and you may only get one opportunity per year per course (SCY, LCM, SCM) to accumulate official times, so you may as well start now. Starting to collect times early will also give you a better point of reference for your improvement. I eventually got to the point where I selected events by which ones were the least popular, that way I’d score more points (which is one of the reasons your team will love you for showing up and racing). This strategy also gave me a lot of inspiration to learn butterfly, which I'm now very grateful for. I get my goggles from Kiefer too http://www.kiefer.com/ The products and quality are consistent, and I always know where to find them. I like all the Kiefer brand products I’ve tried and get the goggles with silicon gaskets that have good peripheral vision (for backstroke). Their prescription goggles are very reasonably priced and are nearly identical in style to my regular goggles, so it is pretty easy to switch between the two. I find a good fitting pair of goggles with silicon gaskets are the least offensive for leaving marks around my eyes. “Good fitting” is the key here... if they are too tight they are going to leave a mark no matter what. I bought a pair of barracudas once, I thought they sucked, what a total waste of money (but that’s just me). - - - As for guts, listen to this: I was in the middle of a meet checking out the (so far) posted results when I overheard a woman behind me telling someone she’d learned to swim less than two years earlier. (Huh!?) It was kind of crowed and boisterous on that part of the deck and I didn’t trust my hearing, so when she’d finished her conversation I chatted her up a bit (she was really cute too, which didn’t hurt either). Turns out she really had never learned to swim (she was about 30). Her adolescent daughter was learning to swim, so she figured it was about time that she do the same. She was an athlete, was into body sculpting, but blew out her knee and her doctor told her all she could do safely now was swim (so that was additional motivation to learn). I watched her swim at meets for about two years (I’ve since moved from that region). She was by no means the fastest fish in the pond, but she kept showing up and doing it. I thought she had a lot of raw nerve. She got LOTS of support from her team too (which was usually the biggest team at meets). They would cheer her on during her swims to a level that you generally had to suspend conversation. It seemed like a win-win situation all the way around to me.
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