[CORE] My first year of swimming, preemptive retrospective.
Former Member
I know, I know... a few of you may be asking what the heck a preemptive retrospective is supposed to be, but indulge me, I'm a writer. If you can put up with Jim Thornton, you can put up with the kinds of oxymorons I like to invent that would make George Carlin roll over in his grave.
I'm ten months into competitive swimming now. Feels like yesterday I was posting my introductory thread! So perhaps time flies, but I feel this year has been slower than any of the last seven or eight. I made a lot of changes in my life this year, number one among them being my entry into this sport and way of life. The last decade mostly consisted of me single-mindedly barreling towards one goal, one direction, one dream at a very damaging cost, and as such, my perception of the passage of time got faster and faster as the years just flew by. But swimming was a new and radically different variable that I threw into the mix with 2009. Everything slowed down, in the best possible way.
Now while I may be trudging through a muddy swamp of time right now (and may I stay in that swamp for a long time still), my swimming times are only getting faster and faster. My coach recently said I have made great progress in a small amount of time. To be honest, I don't know what the heck he's talking about, but I go ahead and believe him anyway. "If you say so!" He is the expert, after all. I haven't actually been to a meet since April, but it appears November I'll be returning to competition, with my USAS team. The training there is so plenty intensive that I decided to drop Masters for the time being. Wouldn't want to overtrain. But not to worry, I will return! Probably in January. But in November, I will know what my newest times are.
Recently, since I'm not really fighting the weight battle anymore (170 pounds... 70 lbs lower than my all-time high a year ago), I've begun to realize I have to think less about the simple act of getting back in shape and tearing down those heaps and heaps of fat, and more about creating and building up certain important things. For instance, I need to begin carving out the developed and powerful body that will carry me towards my goal times, I need to begin erecting a tower of confidence out of the uncountable steel beams that represent every believable indicator of my ability that I can find (the foundation work is done, all the earth dug out- but that's a removal process), and I need to finally start working on my ace-in-the-hole secret weapon, which still remains in a conceptual, theoretical stage. Every swimmer needs an Area 51... but I digress.
Going back to that powerful body I so desire raises a question... the skinniest, hardest parts about me are my arms and legs. But my torso, or my core, is the softest part of my body. This seems to fit in with the problem I've been noticing about my swimming lately... I'm swimming with my arms and legs. This is, I think, bad, and you would probably agree, especially since I have a terrible kick (that will change). My pull is better, but still... I think I've underused my core all the way up to this point in my swimming. However, and this particularly upsets me, I don't know and sometimes I can't even imagine what exactly I'm supposed to do with my core! Help me, Masters forum! I just need a nudge in the right direction. Is it like... should everything follow what the core does first, in a kind of way, as a general rule? Or something else? I have a slight idea as to how my core powers my arms, but absolutely no idea what to do with my core in relation to my legs, especially in flutter kick. Perhaps one of you can provide me with an inspiring quote or insightful anecdote about the core's importance in swimming? How is the core used in each of the four strokes? As is, I feel I'm in the bad habit of simply using my limbs to drag and push my core along, instead of making it what it's supposed to be, whatever that is.
For so long, I have neglected the core. This is really unfitting since I just realized my username itself is an unintended play of that exact word with Ouroboros.
I think you can tell what this thread is really about (CORE!), but every time I start one of these threads I can never resist writing a novel so I changed the title from "I think I'm underusing my core" to the one that's there now, as it's more indicative of the post as a whole.
Former Member
Thank you everyone for the input, I am reading over this thread while eating dry wheat toast, fresh squeezed OJ and fresh blackberries.
I think I will attempt to start running, two of you have stated overwhelming results that I cannot ignore. Journaling my food intake is an interesting thought, it would probably reveal lots of potential calories I could remove.
Kevin (Mswimming)- How many days a week do you run and how far? Aerobically, I am prepared to run but as a swimmer who swims predominantly breaststroke my good healthy knees are important.
Any beginner running suggestions?
And I was just kidding about Ahelee, she is a fantastic coach!
One of the best 400 IM swimmers I know suggests building each 100.
I would recommend doing this except for butterfly.
Do not let you adrenaline talk you into going too fast on the 100 fly!
a 400 IM.
Never swam it, but there is a interview on floswimming (iirc) at Clovis, two girls were behind the blocks before the 400IM chanting "float the fly, float the fly, float the fly."
Sounds like great advice. Long smooth easy strokes and just finish the fly with as much energy as possible left.
If you are strong at everything else or your *** is better than your back, build. If your back is better than your *** then easy fly, strong back, easy ***, fast free.
"Easy" is an overcompensation technique. You think you are swimming an easy fly, but you will end up going a respectable time.
I would put the 400IM in the strategy race category. Don't worry about going out too easy on your first attempt, because coming home, I doubt you will still think you went out too easy :)
Also, this is USA-S. It was pretty much a requirement to talk to the coach before and after each race for me. He/She will give you direction on what to do based on how you are swimming that day, what he knows your strengths and weaknesses are and what he thinks can be learned from a potentially experimental race. The coaches' advice supersedes what advice you get here.