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Swimming
to Health
By BILL HAMMONS
Since January 2005, I have embraced
TI swimming and it has been good to me in return. When
I started, I’d
been suffering chronic fatigue symptoms for several
years. Chronic fatigue has no known causes, thus is
identified largely by its symptoms. One tires easily
and recovers slowly. Muscles ache. Extra sleep is needed.
Avoid caffeine and alcohol.
Exercise is important to regaining one’s strength,
but in careful moderation. Any intense activity brought
on muscle soreness that I had never experienced short
of a 20-mile run or 100-mile bike. An hour of running,
at a once-moderate pace would have me trying to sleep
off soreness and fatigue for the rest of the day and
able to do little for the next few days.
In an effort to exercise without crashing, I varied
my activities. Cycling and the elliptical trainer helped,
as there was no impact. Yet both targeted leg muscles
and after two or three days, I’d crash again.
As I was using exercise to de-stress and refresh, it
was surprising to be humbled by something I once did
so easily. So, I went back to the pool. I’d been
a Red Cross swimmer and even a lifeguard. Fifteen years
ago, I even tried Masters swimming for a year though
I never advanced beyond the slow lane – usually
feeling nearly swamped by the four to six other swimmers
who shared it. Back in the pool, 15 years later, I
was still slow, but swimming felt therapeutic. I wasn’t
passing any “real” swimmers yet, but swimming
felt like a massage compared to a run.
Because
freestyle was exhausting, I searched the Internet
for insight. Providentially, I came to the Total
Immersion web site and was immediately encouraged
by how different
it seemed from everything else. I ordered the Freestyle
Made Easy DVD and its downoadable study guide,
both of which I devoured. I also used the TI Discussion
Forum to learn from others and ask my own questions.
Eventually I attended a Weekend
Workshop.
What
made TI ideal was that mindful, purposeful practice – rather
than exertion – was the cornerstone for success.
Not only did TI give me permission to go slowly,
it also showed me how to turn ease into an asset. Before
I started TI, I could swim 50 yards in 60 seconds,
but only while fresh. After a few
repeats,
my times would quickly soar to 80 seconds. Nor
could I swim much more than 100 yards of freestyle.
To
continue, I needed to switch to breaststroke or
elementary backstroke.
After six months of TI drilling and swimming, my
physical strength had begun to return. As well,
I had greatly
increased my range of practice options, as illustrated
by this practice I completed in the summer of 2005…after
a 20-mile bike ride.
Freestyle swimming for forty minutes:
First, 20 minutes of "fast" 50s concentrating
on time and stroke count. Times began at 57 seconds
and steadily improved until I was repeating 51’s. Stroke count ranged from 40 to 44 for golf scores
between 95 and 97. I recovered between “speed” 50s
with TI drills for “active rest” with
ample Sweet Spot pauses between drill cycles, beginning
with
basic balance drills and progressing to multi-switches.
Next, 20 minutes of "efficient" 50s concentrating
on lowering stroke count and reduced focus on repeat
time. Stroke counts started at 35 per 50, and improved
steadily to 31. My times ranged from 60 to 57 and
I surprised myself with a couple golf scores under
90!
Again, I practiced drill 25s between whole-stroke
50s, progressing from balance drills to switches.
The drills
helped me train myself to maintain my best technique
for the full duration of my practice. From previous
training and coaching experience, I’d learned
to do technique work when somewhat tired. Because
one especially needs to rely on good form as fatigue
mounts,
technique work can have more benefit than just
adding to your distance. One caveat: If one becomes
too tired
to even drill right, it's time get out of the pool.
Then I did 10 minutes of short axis drills. 25
yards of each short axis drill progressing to a
25 of whole-stroke
butterfly. Having never done Fly, this was new
and stimulating. Though I had no instructor for
feedback,
two lovely women told me how good my Fly looked.
They were impressed because I didn’t swim Butterstruggle.
After my 25 Fly, I swam a few minutes of easy breaststroke.
I finished by “playing” with elementary
backstroke, recovering both arms out of the water and
trying to get solid underwater pulls, with just enough
of a breaststroke kick for balance and timing. I did
several 50s in 51 - 52 seconds and felt completely
exhilarated. Not only had I done the “exotic” elementary
backstroke, I was doing it well, going fast enough
to pass a fair swimmer doing freestyle with flip
turns.
Sunday evening came and I was able to keep up with
my family without crashing on the couch. With regular
swimming, I was able to exercise, aerobically, for
an hour or two each day and had fewer down days.
My body and legs remained fresh.
Now, as a TI instructor, I have particular empathy
for those who have experienced fatigue and injury
and want to learn how to swim easily and well.
As well,
because really good swimming is fresh, satisfying
and exciting. I want to share that with others
as Dr George
Sheehan, Jim Fixx, Kenny Moore, Hal Higdon and
Joe Henderson have done with running. Thousands
wanted
to experience running as they described it. If
I can share the benefits I’ve gained from
swimming easily and confidently in the pool and
open water,
I hope others will seek it too.
Having competed in cycling and running, I am now
doing triathlons too. The competition I’d most like
to win is for the best looking, long and easy stroke.
If I can make it look easier than anyone else and inspire
others to want the same kind of stroke, I’d
be thrilled. As I play and experiment with what
TI teaches,
I invariably come back to appreciating the TI focus
on pleasure.

Bill Hammons has over 25 years experience in education,
training, finance and sales. He lives, swims, and teaches
TI in the Atlanta area.
Contact Bill at whammm@gmail.com.
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