I'm new to swimming and have several questions about avoiding injuries. Background: I used to be a runner a long long time ago. Took it seriously, used to train 70 miles / week, ran a 9:32 two mile in high school. But that was almost 30 years ago. Injuries kept me from running seriously any more and used biking as a substitute, and also did 4 years free weight training until I strained my shoulder. Have tried several times to take up swimming and finally this year have been more successful. Been swimming every other day for the past 5 months, would like to swim more but it bothers my shoulder if I go too often. I only swim freestyle, since I never learned the other strokes. So I am basically a very one dimensional swimmer. Watch videos on youtube to try to learn and to actually use a good freestyle technique. I have a 'distance' mindset. Don't like swimming sets or intervals so I warmup and then swim non-stop. Been slowly increasing distance / speed. For October I averaged 1500 - 1600 yards per workout. My average pace now is just under 50 seconds per 50 yards. I've got my 1650 yard time down to 26:58. Long story short, I'm really enjoying the swimming, would like to increase distance and my next goal is to get down to 45 second laps over a mile. BUT most importantly I want to make sure I don't get injuries so I can keep it going. I stretch as much as possible, but I am starting to get some aches and pains in the elbows and also the right shoulder. I think this is related to trying to keep my elbows high.... also I haven't learned to breath bilaterally yet, so I always breath to my left and feel that my right arm goes much deeper each stroke as I turn to the left to breath. I try to keep things as even and symmetrical as possible, but since I always breath left.... My gym has a masters club and I'm sure I'd get lots of good pointers from them, but I haven't joined yet because I don't swim all four strokes and feel pretty sure I won't even try butterfly, and plus they swim 2500 - 3000 yards which I'm not up to yet.
Questions:
1. Does the high elbow position, or can the high elbow position cause elbow pain (I have slight discomfort over the medial epicondyle)? Or is that a sign that my stroke is off?
2. Been icing down my shoulder after each swim (elbows too for that matter) and it seems to help but can that mask a more serious problem?
3. Would swimming multiple sets rather than one single distance ease stress on shoulder or elbow joints since you get a breather every so often?
4. Would swimming sets help me improve form? I feel that my stroke is OK for up to 500 yards then starts breaking down and getting sloppy as I get tired (definitely splashing more). Would a little breather between sets allow me to keep better form over a longer time / distance?
Finally, I realize it might be hard to answer these questions without knowing how good/bad my technique is, but thought this might be a good place to learn a bit.
Thanks in advance for any comments.
Work with a teacher or a coach. I hurt my shoulder over the summer and it has been a frustrating return. There are just some normal moves that don't work.
you need someone to watch your stroke and give you pointers.
Rotation is the most important thing to relieve stress.
Learn other strokes. *** is not as hard on the shoulder and can give you an active rest time.
Don't beat the shoulder up. You really don't want it to quit on you completely.
Work with a teacher or a coach. I hurt my shoulder over the summer and it has been a frustrating return. There are just some normal moves that don't work.
you need someone to watch your stroke and give you pointers.
Rotation is the most important thing to relieve stress.
Learn other strokes. *** is not as hard on the shoulder and can give you an active rest time.
Don't beat the shoulder up. You really don't want it to quit on you completely.