Overcoming Adversity
A sports injury can be an overwhelming experience, and
many athletes stop training because of the pain. This is
understandable, but if you can overcome your injury and
learn how to strengthen the inherent weakness, you could
become a stronger competitor.
Once you've gone through an injury you gain a deeper
understanding of your limitations, and grow a stronger
appreciation of your abilities. Somewhere in the back
of your mind you realize that all this could be taken
away, so you train smarter and perform better.
Most masters will encounter some sort of injury along
the way, but staying determined to get through the negative
experience will become your greatest strength. Nothing feels
better than having the ability to perform once again. Still
having bounce in your step and fuel in your tank goes quite
far in a post-injury performance.
The result is a more balanced athlete, especially throughout
the training process. Small gains have a deeper value, and
the joy of swimming becomes the primary focus, as nothing
is taken for granted.
At the end of the day, trying to see this perspective may help
to overcome the adversity you encounter when coping with an
injury.
Good luck and Happy Swimming,
Jonathan Miller
All very true... but just subjectively speaking, when I have injuries that keep me out of action, my main thought often is "okay, can I just skip this growth experience and get back to what I want to do?" ;) Takes a bit of time to come round to recognizing that I have to take care of the injury first. Should mention I'm more a runner than a swimmer, although I've gotten more active in swimming in the past couple years--and the swimming has helped me avoid running injuries for the most part and shortened the recovery when I do get injured. Thank God, no swimming injuries, and I hope it stays that way!
All very true... but just subjectively speaking, when I have injuries that keep me out of action, my main thought often is "okay, can I just skip this growth experience and get back to what I want to do?" ;) Takes a bit of time to come round to recognizing that I have to take care of the injury first. Should mention I'm more a runner than a swimmer, although I've gotten more active in swimming in the past couple years--and the swimming has helped me avoid running injuries for the most part and shortened the recovery when I do get injured. Thank God, no swimming injuries, and I hope it stays that way!