Articles and Blog Posts
Technique Improvements
There are five main points to consider when thinking about your technique, and seeking to become more efficient
Find your balancing points in the water. These balancing points include your head, both right and left shoulders, and both right and left hips.
With a solid core (your core extends from your belly to your back, just above the hip line and below the rib cage) begin to generate and coordinate rhythmic movements. These movements are generated from your five balancing points.
Transfer the power of your core strength to the power of your arms and legs.
Wall Speed and Underwater Shimmers
Sometimes an often overlooked aspect for swimming greatness is the time spent underwater off of your start, and each of your turns. This is a huge mistake! Swimmers will never be as fast in the middle of the pool as they are when coming off the wall, or starting block. Why would this be? The answer is simple! You get to push first! In fact, coming off of the wall in a pool is the same thing as jumping off the floor.
Thought Stopping
There are times in all of our lives where our thoughts manage to get the best of us. Most of these times, I think we’d all agree, the imagined outcome of our given situation is not nearly as problematic as our earlier thoughts made them out to be. Yet, we continue to have these self-defeating thoughts as if somehow, this time, our preconception of how things are going to be is accurate. But it never really is. This can be particularly true for competitive athletes in crucial situations.
Book Recommendations
Winning the Mind Game
John Edgette
Mindset
Carol Dweck
Willpower
Roy Baumeister
Flourish
Martin Seligman
iGen
Jean Twenge
The Art of Mental Training
Gonzales
Way of the Peaceful Warrior
Millman
The Evolving Self
Kegan
Daring Greatly
Brown