competing vs. not competing

Is it wrong to train hard, but not compete?
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I fall into the train and non-compete category, like the majority (around 70-80%) of registered USMS members. On my team, we have ample opportunity to do timed swims, before/during/after workouts, and I'll do those on a regular basis, and those are more than enough to satisfy any competition bug I may get. I used to do 2-3 meets a year, and did the USMS national meet when it was local, but I just saw little reason to compete when I'm not even close to NQT's. The primary reason I workout is for general health and fitness. The results I see in the mirror and hear from others (especially my doctor) are far more important than how fast I can or can't swim. I swim with USMS teams 99% of the time, and if I don't show for workout, I'll usually get a comment from the coach or a fellow swimmer when I miss. Once I'm there, I'll do whatever the coach says to do. The coaches do a fantastic job motivating me--and everyone else--by recording times, keeping team records, etc. I don't compete in pools anymore. I like OW races because it is about the race not the time. And in every OW rce there are always races within a race. For example in a 5K last year a group broke from the front so fast I never had a shot, but half way into the race a group of us had come together and we raced stroke for stroke, each of us trying to break away. It came down to the lake 400 meters. Lots of fun.
Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I fall into the train and non-compete category, like the majority (around 70-80%) of registered USMS members. On my team, we have ample opportunity to do timed swims, before/during/after workouts, and I'll do those on a regular basis, and those are more than enough to satisfy any competition bug I may get. I used to do 2-3 meets a year, and did the USMS national meet when it was local, but I just saw little reason to compete when I'm not even close to NQT's. The primary reason I workout is for general health and fitness. The results I see in the mirror and hear from others (especially my doctor) are far more important than how fast I can or can't swim. I swim with USMS teams 99% of the time, and if I don't show for workout, I'll usually get a comment from the coach or a fellow swimmer when I miss. Once I'm there, I'll do whatever the coach says to do. The coaches do a fantastic job motivating me--and everyone else--by recording times, keeping team records, etc. I don't compete in pools anymore. I like OW races because it is about the race not the time. And in every OW rce there are always races within a race. For example in a 5K last year a group broke from the front so fast I never had a shot, but half way into the race a group of us had come together and we raced stroke for stroke, each of us trying to break away. It came down to the lake 400 meters. Lots of fun.
Children
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