Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Mental fortitude

It's amazing how much my mental swimming game has changed since highschool.  Back then, I was more or less equally opportunistic regarding all four strokes, although I liked swimming back the most in practice, followed closely by fly.  Free was just something I did a lot of--didn't have feelings for it either way.  And breast, well, it was just there.

Fast forward to the present, six and a half years later.  Back is still my favorite stroke to swim in practice, but I've come to really NOT like swimming a lot of free.  I know a big part of my anti-free attitude is because I'm in a pretty rough transition period regarding my technique, but my patience for swimming it doesn't extend much past a 200 at a time.

My appetite for fly has increased, as well.  While I used to enjoy swimming fly, and thought that long/big fly sets were no biggie, I never truly just enjoyed swimming it.  That's changing.  As I'm forcing myself swim more fly in practice (see my previous post for the reason why), I'm coming to enjoy swimming it in practice.  Admittedly, in the week since I started swimming more fly at practice, I have yet to do more than several fly 50s back to back.  For instance, last night's practice had a main set that was several rounds of a set of 25s, 50s, and 75s.  I did most of the 25s fly, the 50s fly/back, and the 75s fly/back/fly.  While I don't have near the endurance in fly that I do in back or free yet, I've come to enjoy swimming fly more than free.  And in practice, at least, my fly speed when I do short sprints isn't too far off my free speed.  I just feel more relaxed when I do fly (shoulder endurance notwithstanding) at this point than when I do free.  Fly is also quite a bit less of a mental effort than free, since the fly technique feels quite natural at this point, versus the free technique that still requires a fair amount of active thinking.  Quite peculiar.

While I don't yet have the mental fortitude to be blase about doing long distances fly, I am inching and squinching my way there.  Just a month or two ago, my shoulders would hurt after doing more than a few 25s fly and I kinda dreaded doing those distances.  Now I look forward to the short distances and don't have any shoulder fatigue unless I'm doing either longer distances or a bunch of short distance sprints.  By the time the next meet rolls around on January 15th in Annapolis, I should be at the point where a 100 fly is a piece of cake, and by the first meet in February (Feb. 11-12 in Richmond), the 200 should also be a welcome event.
If this continues, it bodes well for my becoming a full time flyer and part time backstroker!

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Almost halfway through the shortcourse season...time to focus!

With the current season (we've got three seasons--"long course" in the summer, then two short course seasons, one in the fall and one in the spring) ending on Friday, I'm starting to map out what I will focus on for the next season, which starts on January 2nd.

Over the past couple of months, I've gotten comfortable in the water again, but haven't really focused on any one or two things to concentrate on.  I'm picking that now, so I'll have January-April to focus on the areas I pick, so by the time Nats rolls around at the end of April, I should be doing quite well in those things.

The #1 thing I'm focusing on (started last week) is butterfly.  Of all four strokes, it by far feels the best.  Besides trying to get Nats cuts in it, I've got another, personal, goal.  By the time April rolls around, I want to have done one practice all fly.  In highschool, I had a bet (no clue what the bet was about) with one of my coaches about doing a 2.5 hour Saturday practice all fly, admittedly with fins.  I did do the whole thing fly, so I figure if I was able to do somewhere around a 9000 then, give or take, I should be able to get myself in shape to do roughly a 3500 or so by April.
So, towards that goal, I've set myself a training regimen.  At each practice, I'm aiming to do at least a 400 fly throughout the practice.  And at one practice a week, I'll do an extra 175 yards.  That will build each week, so week one (this week) will have one practice where I'll do a total of 575 yards fly.  Week two (first week in January) will have one practice where I'll do a total of 750 yards fly.  So on and so forth.  In addition, every two weeks I'll increase the base fly amount.  So the first two weeks will have a 400 fly as the base amount at practice, the next two will have a 500, then 600, and on and on.  By the end of April, that will be a 2800 fly during that one practice and a base amount of an 1100 fly (if my math is correct).  I should have a high enough fly endurance at that point that fitting in another 500-700 or so shouldn't be an issue for the all-fly practice.

The #2 thing I'm focusing on is backstroke, getting my technique down.  As I mentioned in my post on the video session a week and a half ago, I've got some technique issues I need to iron out.  I'm trying to get back to being a flyer and backstroker, something I was the last year and a half or so in highschool.

The #3 thing I'm focusing on is my breaststroke.  I know, I know, I'm not a breaststroker by a long shot!  That being said, I would like to get back into the IM scene, and that has historically been by far my weakest leg of the IM.  All I'm working on is breast technique, so it's quite a bit less of a time consuming issue than my fly or back.

Anyways, with the first foci, I should be able to greatly improve my fly, hopefully surpassing the progress I made in it in highschool.  With backstroke, I just want to get back to where I had been, or at least in the general vicinity.  And with breast, I just want it to not suck as terribly as it currently does.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Results of underwater camera session

This past Saturday at practice, we had an underwater video session.  Due to the large number of us doing it, we didn't get to do any turns, though.  We ended up doing 6x25s, four IM order and then two choice.  The first four were filmed from the side of the pool and the last two were filmed head on from the end of the lane.  Unfortunately, I didn't think to swim fast during them.  Pretty big mistake on my part, since my fast swim is quite different than my practice pace swim for free, and to a lesser extent, fly.  I think my back and breast are more or less the same no matter what speed I swim.

Anyways, I'd been looking forward to this for quite a while, since the last time I had been filmed was in 2004 or 2005, and I know my strokes have changed since then.

Fly (from the side): Overall, it looked pretty good, although the coach (Drew, the head coach) said I was pressing down a bit too much with my head and chest.  I disagree with that assessment, but everything else about the stroke was good.

Back (from the side): Drew said it was overall pretty good, although there are two areas to work on.  The first is my hand position when I'm pulling--I bend my wrist forward, like I'm trying to really scoop the water.  I should keep my hand in a flat plane with my wrist, not bending it at nearly a 90 degree angle.  The other issue is the end of the pull and beginning of the over-water recovery.  Drew wants me to pop my arm out of the water much quicker than I do already.  When I swim at a race pace, my arms move quite a bit faster than at practice pace, so that might mitigate that issue.  However, my arm speed has always been one of my problem areas with backstroke--I can remember Scott and Mike harping on me to spin them faster.

Breast (from the side):  Ooh boy, this one was messy.  Breaststroke has been just about at the bottom of my priority list for swimming technique for years (at least since the early 2000s), so it was no surprise when Drew basically tore it apart.  Mike and Scott, in highschool, had worked on me pressing my chest down into the water in order to raise my hips and legs closer to the surface.  I had a terrible body position in highschool when swimming breast, and always swam at an angle in the water, leading to breast being a much more physically taxing stroke than it needed to be.  Well, driving my chest down is no longer something I need to work on...now I go to almost the opposite extreme.  Now I push down too far with my chest and arms, diving my arms down a bit at full extension.  On the plus side, my hips and legs are up towards the surface, right where they're supposed to be.  I also don't sweep my arms out wide enough on the pull, and lead a bit with my elbows as I sweep them in before extending.  I have no idea if my technique changes any when I swim fast.  Sigh.  ...And breast goes right back to the bottom of my technique priority list!

Free (from the side): Ooh boy, this was another fun one, and was the one I most wanted feedback from.  Up through highschool, I had horrendous free technique.  On the recovery of the stroke, my arms were mostly straight, they'd cross over the center line of my body when I'd pull underneath, and I led with my elbows.  About the only thing I had going for me was that I had great body rotation and kept my ear on my shoulder when I would take a breath.  Mike and Scott started to really work on my free technique a few months before I stopped swimming in 2005, but that wasn't enough to erase 13 years of bad technique.  Starting to swim again this year, my mind remembered the technique I was supposed to be utilizing, but my mind constantly fights a (more or less losing) battle with muscle memory that wants to go right back to what I used to do.  Anyways, there were some good signs from the video.  You couldn't see it underwater, but I now have a high elbow recovery, which helps with my hand placement when my hands enter the water.  My hands don't cross over the center line and I mostly don't lead with my elbows anymore, although from time to time muscle memory wins the mental struggle and I have a bad pull.
All that stuff being great to see, the biggest bone that Drew picked with my free is also the one that is a total nonissue when I swim fast.  At slower speeds, I over rotate and spend too much time on my side on each stroke, pausing a split second before I start the pull.  I also don't pop my hands out of the water at the end of the pull.  Neither is an issue at race speed.  I really wish I'd swum at race speed so that I could've gotten an analysis of the technique that actually matters.

Back (head on): Same issues from above, but the hand/wrist thing was more evident.  In addition, since we didn't have flags over the part of the pool we were swimming in, I tilted my head back to see how close I was to the wall.  For some reason, everyone in the reviewing room thought that was hilarious and said there are easier ways to see where the wall is.  No idea what that would be, since I've done the head tilt thing as long as I can remember.

Free (head on): Same as above.

Underwater work off walls: I got great marks for my underwater work when I pushed off the walls, being held up as the example for how to do proper dolphin kicks and the breastroke pullout.

Overall, the video session was of mixed utility, although it was quite nice to see how my strokes have changed in the last six years!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

The long and tortuous road to Nationals

First off, let me clarify the Nationals I'm talking about--these are Masters (USMS) Nationals, not USA Swimming Nationals.  Muuuuuch different qualification standards.  Off the top of my head, I'd say the Nationals cuts are roughly equivalent to A or B State cuts for USA Swimming.  I'd have to check the other cuts to make sure, but they sound about right...at least for how those cuts were back in 2005.

Anyways, my goal is to make several Nats cuts this season.  The eligibility period goes through mid April, and Nationals is April 26-29th.

That gives me seven more meets to try and get cuts between now and then.  I've got two meets a month I can go to January-March, and then one meet in April before Nats.  Should be plenty of time to get a few cuts.

Based on my swimming performance at the two meets I've swum at so far, butterfly seems to be my best shot.  I age up into the next age group (25-29) a few weeks before Nats, so I gotta try and get those cuts rather than the ones in my current 19-24 age group, which are slower.  Anyways, here are the cuts for the two age groups for the events I have even a passing interest in, and my current times.  I've highlighted the cuts I think I have a decent chance of making by April:

Event
19-24 Cut
25-29 Cut
Current Times
50 Free
24.79
24.33
Low 26
100 Free
54.90
53.83
NT
200 Free
1:58.58
1:56.06
NT
50 Back
29.03
28.22
31.62
100 Back
1:03.12
1:01.53
1:07.14
200 Back
2:15.87
2:11.39
NT
50 Breast
32.23
31.04
NT
100 Breast
1:11.09
1:07.53
NT
200 Breast
2:36.42
2:26.59
NT
50 Fly
27.02
26.78
28.03
100 Fly
1:00.28
59.09
1:08.69
200 Fly
2:21.06
2:12.19
NT
100 IM
1:02.89
1:00.77
1:10.21
200 IM
2:15.88
2:11.51
NT
400 IM
5:08.98
4:51.49
NT


Here's my breakdown of each of the highlighted events:
  • 50 free: Freestyle is decidedly not my stroke, but this is about a third of a second slower than my old time, so it is conceivably achievable.  Didn't have a very good race at the one meet I've swum the 50 at, so I don't know how realistic that goal is at this point.
  • 100 free: This one is a pretty lofty goal--my best time in the 100 free was a 52.80, and I think that was a fluke, as I never went below a mid 53 besides that time, with the majority of my times being low 54s.  One of the coaches is working with me on my free technique, so who knows where that will take me.  It's already a good bit different than it was in highschool.
  • 50 back: I'm a bit put off by my back.  The technique feels decent, although I don't have quite the leg endurance that I used to, but my times just aren't there so far (and neither 50 back I've swum so far was a very good swim).  If I can get back to my old speed by April, this should be a piece of cake.
  • 100 back: Same as the 50.  Not sure what's going on with my back, and I haven't had great races the two times I've swum it, issues with the turns and start.
  • 200 back: Kick endurance is a bigger deal for this.  At this point, since I haven't swum it in a meet yet, I have no idea where I stand with it.  I'd say this is probably a lofty goal to achieve by April, at least with how everything stands now.
  • 50 fly: So far, fly has been the most impressive success for me.  It was the stroke I was improving the most in when I stopped swimming in 2005, and it appears that I still have the technique and form.  I dropped 1.3 seconds in the 50 at this past meet from the one the month before, so this should be a cakewalk to get the cut by April.
  • 100 fly: Only swum it once so far and had a terrible race strategy that time, in addition to not being smart about warming up beforehand.  This should be pretty easy to get by April.
  • 200 fly: Haven't swum it yet.  My big concern is that we rarely do more than a 100 or so of stroke at a time in practice, so I'm going to really have to work to get my fly endurance up.  At this point, it's a lofty goal.
  • 400 IM: IF I can get my stroke endurances up, this should be achievable.  My old time was somewhere around 15-20 seconds faster than this, so if I can get my fly and back times down to around there, I should be good for this one.
Of these cuts, I think the 50 fly is a sure thing.  100 fly should be fairly achievable, if I can get my race strategy down pat.  Back is the biggest question right now, as my speed just isn't there.  Not too concerned about free or the IM, as neither is my focus.

To get these cuts, I've got three big areas of focus/concern. 

1) My starts need some work.  We've only done starts once in practice (at least of the practices I've been to), so I really only get to try them in warmup at meets.  Given how long it's been since I was competing and swimming at a high level, about six and a half years, my starts aren't very good.  My reaction time is slow, and my form on dives isn't very good.  My backstroke start is just bleh.
2) Stroke endurance.  As I mentioned above, we generally don't do more than a 100 stroke at a time in practice.  Well, we might do some choice work during warmup or something, but we normally don't do much distance stroke speed work.  I've gotta figure out a way to increase my stroke content in practice, otherwise I'm afraid I'll never build up the endurance I need for the 200 fly and 200 back.
3) Practice intensity.  Lately I've been swimming in the fast lane at practice.  Most of the time I swim last in the lane, or second to last or something, but it's been great for getting me to push myself.  I've seen a big improvements in the intervals I can hold in practice from doing so, at least in freestyle.  If I can continue to stay in those lanes, push myself, and keep up the high number of practices, I should continue to notch big improvements in my times from meet to meet.

I've got five weeks till the next meet (and then two more weeks till the meet after that), so time to get cracking!

Monday, December 5, 2011

The aftermath

Had a great meet yesterday!

The meet was off to a very slow start--10 minutes before the meet began, they discovered the bulkhead was set in the wrong position...and that the starter left the starting equipment at home, so he had to go back and get it...and they didn't print enough heat sheets for everyone...

So, the meet finally kicked off an hour and a half late.

In order, I swam the 50 fly, 100 back, 100 fly, and 50 back.  I had about an hour and twenty minute break between the 100 back and 100 fly.

50 fly: My entered time was a short course meters conversion of my time at the last meet, which was a short course yards meet.  I was entered as a 32.70 and went a 31.28.  That converts to right around a 28.00 in yards, I think.  I had a terrrrrrible start--blanked out at the beep and froze for split second, then pretty much just fell off the block.  Not my best start ever.  And I was a bit less than half a pull too far from the wall at the turn, so it ended up a longer turn than I'd have liked.  If I'd nailed the start and turn, I might have been able to hit around a 30.2.  Still, not half bad at all!  That's my goal (at least, that time converted to SCY) for the next meet, in January!

100 back: Relatively decent start (back starts have never been my strong suit), but my turns at the 25 and 75 (the bulkhead end of the pool) were long.  Entered as a 1.17.99 and went a 1.14.97.  That would convert to a 1.07.17 in SCY.  Still QUITE a bit off my old time, but substantially better than my time at the last meet.  My splits for the two 50s were only 4 seconds apart, so my pacing was pretty good.  However, I still gotta get my overall backstroke speed up, since I should be a good deal faster.

100 fly: I messed this one up pretty badly.  I had almost an hour and a half between the 100 back and this one, but didn't think to warm up beforehand, so my shoulders and back were pretty tight by the time I dove in.  Anyways, I took the first 50 out in waaaaay too slow of a pace (more like a steady 200 fly pace rather than 100 fly sprint pace) and then my lats and back tightened up pretty badly when I tried to sprint the second 50 to correct for the first lackadaisical 50.  Needless to say, it was not my most stellar 100 fly I've swum... :-)  On the plus side, I had a pretty good start and nailed all my turns, although I glided into the finish.  My splits were 7 seconds apart, so my pacing wasn't very good.  Took it out about two and a half seconds slower than I should have and then locked up.  I think this is the first time I've swum a 100 fly without doing drill as a Masters swimmer.  I did a 1:16.69, which translates to around a 1:08.7 SCY.  Not terribly shabby for a first swim, but definitely gives me a goal to improve upon!  In addition, with how tight my lats were for this swim, I think I'm going to have to dive back into my pullup/chinup/pushup routine, which I've neglected since the spring.  Those exercises will bulk up my lats and the fronts of my shoulders, so that should help out a bit.

50 back: This was only 12 minutes after the 100 fly and I had a pretty significant lactic acid buildup by this point, due to not being able to warm down as much as I'd have liked.  Decent start (didn't have any issues with slipping on the pads in either back start this time, as opposed to the last meet), but went a bit deep.  Good turn, but misjudged the finish, so I glided a bit.  Went a 35.29, which was faster than my entered time of 35.39, but it was only about half a second faster than the first 50 in my 100 back.  Not as fast as it could have been, but better than last time.

Takeaways:  My backstroke still needs work.  I'm getting my pacing down a bit better, but my overall speed needs work--I'm further off my old speed in backstroke than I am in fly or free.  We used to get filmed with an underwater camera from time to time back in highschool, so I know how my backstroke looked back then.  We've got and underwater filming session this coming Saturday at practice, so I'll compare my backstroke now to how it had been, to see if my stroke is the culprit, or if I just am not a backstroker anymore.  My 50 fly was pretty darn good, turn and start aside.  Since we rarely do more than a 50 or 75 of fly at a time in practice, I'll have to figure out how to get in more endurance work on fly, since my 100 wasn't all that hot.  On a side note, either my Aquablade jammers stretched out (in length) since the last time I wore them, or my thighs have shrunk in length.  I don't remember having to adjust the length of them that much when I used to wear them in highschool.

Overall, I had a blast at the meet!

Edit: I just looked up the USMS National Qualifying Times.  The meet is in late April (after my birthday), so I'll be aging up then and swimming in the 25-29 age group (if I make any cuts, of course). Per the cuts for that age group, going by my converted times from this meet, I'm 3.49 seconds off in the 50 back, 5.64 seconds off the 100 back, 9.6 seconds off the 100 fly, and 1.25 seconds off the 50 fly. 
If I were to go by the 18-24 age group cuts, I'd be 2.59 seconds off the 50 back, 4.05 seconds off the 100 back, 8.41 seconds off the 100 fly, and 1.01 seconds off the 50 fly.

Of these times, I think the fly times are the most achievable.  Should be able to get the 50 fly, and if I can get my pacing for the 100 fly down, should be able to get that too.  The jury's out on my backstroke.

If my understanding of the rules is correct, if I make a Nationals cut, I can swim up to three events I don't have a cut for, in addition to whatever I have a cut in.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Swimming progress...slowly and painfully improving!

In general (excepting last week, what with vacation around Thanksgiving), I've been doing much better at practices.  I've been averaging from a minimum of 4 practices a week up to 9 practices in a week.  I'm hoping to hit my stride around 7-9 practices a week (there are 12 I can possibly make in any given week).

I'm generally improving a fair amount in practices, although sometimes it feels like I'm going backwards.  In our larger practices, there are five lanes of swimmers: fast lane, either another fast lane or a slightly slower lane (depending on how many are at practice), a medium lane, and then two consecutively slower lanes.  When I started out a few months ago, I stuck solely to the middle lane, and it was fairly challenging at times.  Now I stick to either the second fastest lane or one of the fast lanes in the big practices.  That is, when I'm only doing one practice at a session.  On the days when I do the back to back practices, I'll swim in one of the faster lanes for the first session and then move down a lane for the second session, since I still don't have the endurance to make the intervals in a fast lane for a 2 hour practice.

We don't do much stroke work on intervals that really matter--that is, when we do stroke/IM work, we often do sprints on really easy intervals, so I can't guage how much I've improved in those strokes.

However, my freestyle speed has improved in practice pretty substantially.  When I first started out, quite embarrasingly, a 1:30 pace for multiple 100s free was a chore if we were doing it towards the end of practice.  Lately, though, I've been able to do 1:20 intervals pretty easily, although some practices kick me hard enough in the butt to make me struggle a bit towards the end of practice to make that pace for more than a 100 or two.  Still a far cry from my previous swimming days, but hey, I'll take what I can get!

I have no clue how my backstroke is--it never felt out of whack, and doesn't feel much different now than it did a month or two ago.  Don't swim much breastroke and have no interest in it, so I don't pay attention at all to how I do in that stroke.

Butterfly is quite interesting.  Apparently I'm a MUCH more efficient butterflier when I swim at speed than when I swim at my normal semi-loafing practice pace.  Two weeks ago we did a big IM set that involved a bunch of 200 IMs, the first round just making the easy interval, the next round sprinting.  We did that twice through.  By the end of the first, easy round, my shoulders were killing me on fly.  But when we switched to sprinting, I had no shoulder fatigue at all.  Given, after four sprinted 200 IMs, I was pretty darn tired anyways, but I thought it was interesting that I went from struggling to do a 50 fly at an easy pace to more or less effortlessly sprinting a 50 fly within the space of about 3 minutes.

________________________________________________________________________

I've got my second swim meet this Sunday.  With the exception of Thanksgiving week, I've had almost a month of pretty regular practices to prepare for the meet, so I'm expecting a much better performance than the last meet.

I was only allowed to enter in four events, so I entered in the 50/100 back and 50/100 fly.  This is a 25M meet, rather than 25Y, so it should be interesting to see how my times compare with the last meet (I swam the 50/100 back and 50 fly in that meet).  Given how terrible my backstroke times were at that meet, it is possible that, if my backstroke has improved due to my increased practicing, I could potentially go around the same times in the two back events this time.

After this meet, I've got two meets in January to train for.  Should be a fun two months of swimming!

Monday, October 31, 2011

First meet in 6.5 years!

I had my first meet yesterday, the first time I've swum competitively in 6.5 years.  Going into it, I was rather handicapped by my work schedule--over the last month, I've only managed to get in about 5-6 practices, the majority of which came in this past week.  On a good note, my work schedule should be smooth over the next month or so, so I should be able to get a lot more practices in.

Anyways, it felt fantastic to be back at a swim meet!  That is, as a swimmer and not a coach (I coached a summer league team in Charleston for two years from 2008-2009).  Going into the meet, I was the most nervous I can remember ever being for a swim meet.

Here were my worries going into the meet:
  • I haven't done a start off a block since 2005 (all strokes)
  • I've had nagging issues with my left shoulder being much weaker than my right shoulder while swimming butterfly in practice
  • We haven't done true sprints in practice, so I haven't swum race speed in quite a while
  • My total lack of preparation for the meet--getting in a handful of practices the week before the meet is NOT sufficient
  • My kick is not what it used to be--kick and turns were always my strongest parts in swimming
  • Would I even still have the competitive instinct?
  • My endurance has gone way down, due to the lack of practices issue
The meet, at the George Mason University pool, was a sprint meet, with the longest events being the 200 free and 200 IM.  I entered in the 100 IM, 100 back, 50 fly, 50 back, 50 free, and all four 25s (not a sanctioned race, just a fun thing they do at this meet).  I knew my endurance wasn't very good, so I stayed away from the other 100s and the 200s.  Here's how the events went (not necessarily in the order I swam them):
  • 100 IM: Terrible start.  Good reaction time, but weird blocks and I went waaaaaay too deep.  Having only gotten in two block starts during warmup probably didn't help too much.  The fly felt great, back was so-so, I died on breast, and free was terrible.  The pool has a TON of lines on the bottom of the pool, so that totally screwed up my sense of pool position when swimming fly and free.  Overall, it wasn't as bad as I'd thought it would be.
  • 50 fly: Went too deep off the start, but besides that it felt very good.  My time was off from what I was hoping, but the race itself felt fantastic
  • 100 back: Absolutely terrible--very slick pad on the wall, so I back flopped...and went really deep.  Messed up my stroke count on the 50-75 turn and on the finish, so I glided a bit longer than I should have on both.  Legs totally died at the 75.  Coming off the wall felt really good, though (with the exception of the aforementioned long turn).  However, my time was really bad.  I  mean, REALLY bad.  All things considered, that was a big surprise given how the race felt.
  • 50 back: Another terrible start.  By this point in the meet I was starting to wear down and wasn't spinning my arms fast enough.  Slow race, although my turn felt good.
  • 50 free:  Besides the start, I thought this was a pretty good race.  Besides the 50 fly, this was my strongest race.
  • 25 fly: Finally got the start right (although it was a tad deeper than I'd have liked) and had a good race.
  • 25 back: Another poor start, although I didn't do the back flop.  Glided a bit too long into the wall.
  • 25 breast: Actually felt really good, and had a good start.
  • 25 free: A little deep on the start but not too bad overall.
What I got out of the meet:
  • What the hell happened to my backstroke?!  I used to be a backstroker first and foremost (and a butterflier second).  Even accounting for how much slower all my times were than they used to be, my backstroke times were WAY off the mark.  That's going to need to be my biggest area of focus over the next month or so before the next meet.
  • Apparently shoulder problems in practice do not equate to shoulder problems at a meet, at least in regards to fly!  While my body rhythm wasn't 100% in sync (I'd occasionally have a stroke/kick that were a bit off), fly overall felt VERY good.  It is reminiscent of the year and a half I swam in highschool, when practically overnight I became a butterflier--prior to that I had been terrible at it, but one day at practice it just clicked and I started training for fly then.  Maybe I will become primarily a butterflier now?  Obviously I only swam a 50 of it, but I didn't have the endurance drain that I did while swimming backstroke.
  • I have got to work on my starts.  Of the practices I've been to, we've never used the blocks, so I'll have to see if I can get some practice in on them.
  • I need to practice, practice, practice, and for good measure, practice some more.  With my easier work schedule for the next month or so, I'm going to try and get in at least seven practices a week.
  • Racing with longer hair than I used to have, not to mention facial hair, is odd.  Not sure if I like it.  I'll at least get more frequent haircuts, but the facial hair might disappear at the monthly meets.
  • 59 is not too old to be a pretty darn good swimmer.  There was a guy there who would have beat me in every event he swam when I was back in my prime.  Oldest guy at the meet was 86, I think, and he was able to swim all four strokes with pretty good technique.
  • It is a small, small world.  I got there pretty early to the meet before many people had gotten there (the bleachers were pretty empty).  A guy came in and sat down next to me about 15 minutes later and after we swam warmup, asked me about my Citadel tattoo.  Turns out he's the older brother of a fellow 2009 grad from The Citadel, a guy who was in Tango Company, across the battalion from my company, Oscar Company.  What are the chances of that ?

Overall, I am ecstatic to be back in the world of competitive swimming!  Ever since I started coaching in 2008, I've really missed it and am quite happy to be back where I belong.  Really looking forward to getting back in the swing of things, losing weight, and dropping time!

Friday, September 9, 2011

Motivational/Philosophical quotes on pain

As I try to juggle an increasingly hectic work schedule and my workout/swimming plans, one thing is pretty constant.  That is pain.

Not just the physical pain that comes with using muscles in the pool that have seen very little use in the last six years, or the pain of being out of shape and struggling to get back into shape.  But also pain of the mind, from wrestling with the figurative problem child at work, from putting in long hours with little in the way of tangible results.  The physical pain is quite refreshing, the mental pain not so much.

Several of the folks who read this blog know that I'm a HUGE fan of Jim Butcher and his novels, the main series of which is the Dresden Files.  Here are four excellent philosophical and ridiculously motivating quotes from the series regarding pain, which help me put my pain in perspective.

Quote 1:

"Pain used as a weapon is one thing. Personal pain, the kind that comes from just living our lives, is something else. Pain isn’t a lot of fun, at least not for most folks, but it is utterly unique to life. Pain-physical, emotional, and otherwise-is the shadow cast by everything you want out of life, the alternative to the result you were hoping for, and the inevitable creator of strength. From the pain of our failures we learn to be better, stronger, greater than what we were before. Pain is there to tell us when we’ve done something badly-it’s a teacher, a guide, one that is always there to both warn us of our limitations and challenge us to overcome them. For something no one likes, pain does us a whole hell of a lot of good."

Quote 2:

"...We still hadn't learned, though, that growing up is all about getting hurt. And then getting over it. You hurt. You recover. You move on. Odds are pretty good you're just going to get hurt again. But each time, you learn something.
Each time, you come out of it a little stronger, and at some point you realize that there are more flavors of pain than coffee. There's the little empty pain of leaving something behind - graduating, taking the next step forward, walking out of something familiar and safe into the unknown. There's the big, whirling pain of life upending all of your plans and expectations. There's the sharp little pains of failure, and the more obscure aches of successes that didn't give you what you thought they would. There are the vicious, stabbing pains of hopes being torn up. The sweet little pains of finding others, giving them your love, and taking joy in their life they grow and learn. There's the steady pain of empathy that you shrug off so you can stand beside a wounded friend and help them bear their burdens.
And if you're very, very lucky, there are a very few blazing hot little pains you feel when you realized that you are standing in a moment of utter perfection, an instant of triumph, or happiness, or mirth which at the same time cannot possibly last - and yet will remain with you for life.
Everyone is down on pain, because they forget something important about it: Pain is for the living. Only the dead don't feel it.
Pain is a part of life. Sometimes it's a big part, and sometimes it isn't, but either way, it's a part of the big puzzle, the deep music, the great game. Pain does two things: It teaches you, tells you that you're alive. Then it passes away and leaves you changed. It leaves you wiser, sometimes. Sometimes it leaves you stronger. Either way, pain leaves its mark, and everything important that will ever happen to you in life is going to involve it in one degree or another." 


Quote 3:

"Everyone is down on pain, because they forget something important about it: Pain is for the living. Only the dead don't feel it."


Quote 4:

"Pain is a byproduct of life. That’s the truth. Life sometimes sucks. That’s true for everyone. But if you don’t face the pain and the suck, you don’t ever get the other things either. Laughter. Joy. Love. Pain passes, but those things are worth fighting for. Worth dying for."     

Work, weather, and the attempted attainment of records...

So, the past two weeks have not been very accomodative of my workout plans.

Work has been a beast, and I'm putting in some serious overtime.  Due to my early mornings and/or late nights at work, I made it to two practices last week.  This week has been more of the same, with evening storms in the mix, too, preventing me from being able to practice even when I was able to get off work in time!  Grr!

This week I'm looking at two practices - I did Monday evening and will get tomorrow morning's practice.  I'm drawing a blank on how much yardage I did on Monday, but last Saturday's practice was a 3700.  I expect tomorrow's practice to be similar in length.

I'm feeling a lot better in the water.  My left shoulder is still weak (again, I have no idea why it's weaker than my right), but it isn't hurting as much when I swim--still don't do more than a 25 of fly when doing IM sets, so I'll just do fly drill for the rest of the fly portion.  Hopefully over the next couple weeks I'll be able to swim all the fly without doing any one arm drills.  My kick is slowly coming back, and last Saturday's hour and a half practice left me tired without being sore or painful.  I hope tomorrow's practice is similar in how I cope with it.

Tomorrow's practice is the last of long course season (although all of the pools we practice at are 25Y/M, the season is technically long course).  Short course starts on Monday, and with it, we switch to indoor pools.  Hopefully that will help take care of the weather issue that has been keeping me out of the pool this week!  This project at work is supposed to wind down next week (that being said, the completion date has been pushed back three times already, so I'm not exactly holding my breath), so I'm really hoping that the work side of things will start to let me swim more practices, too!

The first meet is October 15th, and it's a sprint meet.  I'm planning on attending it if I don't have to work that weekend.  The first full meet is the weekend of October 30th, and I'll definitely be attending it.

Doing some research, provided I can get back to near what my old speeds were, I have a chance of setting 8 team records for the 18-24 age group.  It has historically been a very small group for the team, and I think I'm the first person in that age group in several years, at least of those who will compete.  The records that are up for grabs are:
  • 50 back (current record is a 29.31)
  • 100 back (I get this one by default, since no one has swum it)
  • 200 back (ditto)
  • 50 fly (current record is a 24.81--this would be the hardest for me, since I think that was a bit faster than the fastest 50 fly I ever swam)
  • 100 fly (current record is a 57.69--this is a bit slower than my old time, so it is "theoretically" in reach)
  • 200 fly (by default)
  • 200 IM (current record is a 2:06.18--in the general vicinity of my old time, if memory serves me)
  • 400 IM (current record is a 4:44.78--almost 10 seconds slower than my old time, so that puts this one within reach)
There are a lot of factors that will need to come into play for me to get any of those records but the ones I get by default.  I gotta get my shoulders up to speed--as it stands right now, any record that includes swimming fly is out of the question until my shoulders can stand it.  I've gotta pick my speed up--I'm nowhere near those speeds right now, but given time between now and April, it is a possibility.  In regards to the 400 IM, I don't even know if I want to swim a distance that long anymore!  It was a pain in the butt back in the day, and now I won't have a coach forcing me to swim it...or the 500...or the 1000.

My long term goal in terms of competition/records/Nationals cuts is to get back up to speed in back and fly.  Those are the two strokes I had the most success at back in the day, so I hope that they are still my strengths now.  I'm a lot stronger, physically speaking, than I was back then, so hopefully I can put that extra strength and muscle to use in the water.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Act like a tree! Act like a cow! Act like a tree, tree, cow, cow, cow!

Two weeks ago, I took the plunge and finally convinced myself to join a swimteam.  I joined Alexandria Masters Swimming and had my first practice, a total of 2500 yards.  Two words: Glorious!  OW!

Having been out of the water for so long, I've lost so much swimming specific muscle tone.  I've still got most of the technique, but my swimming strength and endurance is completely shot.  My left deltoid is apparently nonexistent, and after swimming freestyle for more than about a 400, it is painful trying to bring my arm out of the water on the recovery part of the stroke.  Strangely, no such problems with my right deltoid, besides an overall lack of endurance.  My kick is also pretty much useless now, too.  That's the part that has hit me the most--the kick used to be my strongest point in swimming.  Kick and turns, that's what I relied on. 

After that practice, I was in pain.  My legs were on fire, my upper back and shoulders were ridiculously sore and tight, and I hobbled around like I was 90 years old.  On the plus side, according to my scale, I had lost almost 2 pounds the next morning.

Had my second practice this morning, two weeks after the first (work got in the way, otherwise this would have happened last week).  It was about a 3000 (I lost count about halfway through the practice, but a 3000 sounds about right).  Same issues as before with my shoulders and legs, although this time I added massive calf cramping on both legs.  So not cool.  I'll weigh in tomorrow to see how I did.

Provided work cooperates, I'm going to try and start swimming four or five weekday morning practices (6:00-7:00) and two or three evening practices (8:00-9:00 or 7:30-8:30 for short course), as well as the Saturday morning practice (8:00-9:30).

My end goal is twofold.
  1. Get down to my 180 pound target weight
  2. Get back in competitive swimming shape and make some short course National Championship cuts for the meet in the spring

Weight matters

Over the past few years, I've tried to get back into shape.  Up through junior year at The Citadel, I was in quite good physical shape, although probably not great swimming shape.  After that summer, though, I started to gain some weight, so tried to develop new forms of exercise.  I tried running, and then hurt my left ankle, which stopped me from running more than the semesterly PT test at school.  The pool at school was out of the picture, given my class schedule, the crappy pool hours, and the horrific shape its piping and overall level of maintenance was in.

After I graduated in August 2009, I got a full time job and started taking evening classes for my MBA.  The ridiculously high level of stress that produced, and the lack of time to exercise, led me to start packing on the pounds.  Towards the end of the MBA program in fall 2010, I started running and working out during my lunch breaks at work.  That helped out a lot through this past spring, when work started ramping up.

Since stopping swimming in summer 2005, I've put on a substantial amount of weight, the majority of which has been muscle, at least until relatively recently. I weighed about 145 when I stopped swimming and was a complete beanpole.  Freshman year at The Citadel saw my weight go down as low as 135 in the fall semester, then I started packing muscle on and finished the year back at 145.  Sophomore year I started to pack on a lot of muscle and hit 165.  Junior year, more muscle and some padding, and hit between 170-175.  Senior year I stayed around 175.  The first year after graduation, when I wasn't exercising my weight went up to about 185.  The next six months, when I was running and working out, I dropped a belt size and kept my weight constant, so I presume it was muscle mass that I added.  Comparing pictures of me back in highschool and me now, I have substantially bulked up, with my chest and shoulders being a lot wider and thicker than they were back then, same with my thighs and arms.  The area between my thighs and my ribcage, though, has bulked up in a *cough, cough* less pleasing way.

Since April/May of this year, though, work, a move from Charleston to Alexandria, and a lack of a convenient workout facility like I had in Charleston at work have mostly prevented me from working out like I'd like to.  Many days, I don't get home from work until 7:00 or later, and I'm too exhausted from work by that point to workout afterwards.  So, that leads me to where I am now.  Provided my scale is working properly (with this scale, that's an iffy proposition), as of yesterday, I weighed 198.2. 

Over the last month, I've been trying to come up with an achievable workout regimen that I could implement about now.

...To be continued...

A bit of background...

Introduction: I'm Tim (duh).  24 years old.  Male.  Swam year round from when I was 6 or so until I was 18, for a total of about 13.5 years.  This is a blog to document my reentry into the wonderful world of swimming and getting into shape again.
 
During my swimming career, I swam for a variety of swim teams (I think I've got them all listed):
  • Nashville Aquatic Club (NAC - Nashville)
  • Houston Elite Aquatic Team (HEAT - Houston)
  • Pelican Athletic Club (PAC - Mandeville, LA)
  • Williamson County Aquatic Team (Water Cats - Nashville metro area)
  • Caritas Swim Team (Caritas - Louisville)
  • Tritons Swimming (Was originally Caritas - Louisville)
Up until I was 14 or 15, I was never really all that serious about swimming.  Around the 15/16 mark, I began to get serious and started dropping some real time in the pool.  I began to specialize in backstroke at that point, then around when I turned 17, I picked up butterfly out of the blue, too.  Really have no clue where fly came from--before then, I sucked at it in practice and meets, then all the sudden it was a lot easier to swim in practice, then at the next meet, I dropped 10 seconds in the 100 fly, and was a butterflyer after that.  Rather bizarre, now that I think about it.

Once I graduated high school and went off to college at The Citadel, I more or less stopped swimming.  I tried to swim a few times a week as a freshman, but the constraints of being a freshman at that school quickly killed that attempt.  In addition, after having lived and breathed pool water and chlorine for so long, I was getting to the point where I didn't want to have anything to do with a pool.

...Until the summer after my junior year.  I got offered an assistant swim coach job at a summer league team on one of the islands in the Charleston area.  I took it and had an absolute blast.  It drove me to get back in the water that summer, and I started swimming a short practice or two (about 45 minutes each) most weekdays, as my schedule permitted.  Once the school year began again, though, that stopped, and I remained out of the water for the next three years, until late this summer.

...To be continued...