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"Fly" Like an Eagle
By
GARY SMALL
My
father taught all the kids to swim at our school
in the town where I grew up in Zambia. This
led to me gaining a reputation as a good swimmer.
And I suppose I was…for the shortest
of distances. But as soon as I had to take
a breath, everything would fall apart.
When we moved to South Africa when I was 10
my reputation as a good swimmer followed and
I was “requested” to appear for
a trial with the swimming team at my new first
school. All was fine for the first 10 meters,
but then I started to drown. I recall being
pulled from the pool and exiled from the “real” swimmers.
A year later, we moved to another city, and
I again found myself standing on the starting
blocks, for a match race with Joel, the school’s
best swimmer in my age group. While I managed
to get myself out of the water this time, Joel
had finished 50 meters by the time I’d
gone about 20.
Hoping to sort out my breathing problem, my
father took me to another coach. He had me
swim some pool widths, short enough that I
could avoid breathing. He said I was a good
swimmer and he couldn’t see a problem.
I explained that as soon as I needed to take
a breath, everything went wrong. He suggested
that I should try an explosive exhale just
before breathing in. My transformation was
instant: The next lap I was suddenly breathing.
My stroke had always been good; now I could
keep going.
This transformation was not common knowledge
at school, until an internal school gala, where
everyone participated. Joel and I raced again
and he beat me by less than a body length.
I was just happy to have been able to complete
a full 50 meters, but the coach ran up to me
excitedly and next thing I knew I was on the
swimming team.
I swam on the school team from age 11 to 16,
specializing in butterfly and freestyle sprints.
I don’t have a record of my times during
these years, but in 1973 our medley relay team,
for which I swam “fly,” was unbeaten
in our region.
At 16, I discovered options that were more
interesting than endless training laps and
left organised sports, until 1995 when I resumed
swimming after repeatedly suffering herniated
disks. After a particularly disabling episode,
I realised I needed to strengthen my core.
I discovered that I really enjoyed training
as an adult, and have not stopped swimming
since. I started competing in Masters in 1999,
and gravitated to free and fly sprints, as
at school.
I first learned of Total Immersion in 2000,
and took a workshop as soon as TI arrived in
South Africa in 2004. After several years of
training much as I had in my youth, I realized
that, as an adult it would be essential to
understand proper technique, as much to avoid
injury as to have a chance at improving my
times in middle age. The people who shared
my interest in technique all seemed to be linked
to TI.
The TI workshop effected the same transformation
as my breathing lesson years earlier. My freestyle
became much more enjoyable, and my new efficiency
made longer distances possible. For the first
time I ventured past 200 meters. I even swam
a mile race and was hooked. I became a TI coach,
and have taught TI continuously since 2005.
My success in freestyle was encouraging, but
achieving similar ease in Fly took longer.
I studied the old 4-Strokes DVD, and spent
a lot of time on body dolphin and other drills,
but could still only “survive” 50
meters in training and racing. I ventured into
a 100-meter race and vividly recall the sickening
feeling of being 15 meters from the finish,
and realising I had literally nothing left
to give. Every stroke from there to the wall
was pure torture, as I could barely lift my
arms from the water.
I watched others swim 200 meters with envy,
and resolved each year to “crack the
fly code” and complete a 200 meter Fly,
but it never happened. I was still barely hanging
on at 100 meters in practice, and looked forward
to butterfly training repeats about as much
as root canal surgery.
When the “Betterfly for Every Body” DVD
was released a year ago, I eagerly studied
it, and while I gained noticeably in ease,
the 200 remained elusive. Reading Terry’s
articles about how he had “solved” the
200 Fly, and even come to enjoy it after 40
years of frustration was tantalizing.
Near the end of 2007 I decided it was time
to recharge my TI skills. I travelled from
Spain to New Paltz for a week at the Swim Studio,
then to the Kaizen Camp in Florida as a trainee
coach. My expectations were utterly exceeded
during those two weeks.
While I hadn’t expected anything spectacular,
when we did the coaches’ session on how
to teach Fly, in the course of a single morning,
I had a series of startling insights into why
I was exhausted after 50 meters and how to
save significant amounts of energy. Here’s
a summary:
1) Like most people, I’d always relied
on a heavy, thigh-driven, energy-sapping kick.
Terry taught us to soften the knees, then “flick” the
toes, a quick, compact, efficient action that
I could feel propel me forward to my “landing.”
2) I had always re-entered the water by diving
downwards. Terry explained that our “primary
landing zone” should be the area between
the elbows and sternum with the arms landing
lightly – even softly – forward.
I could feel this send momentum forward, rather
than down.
3) I’d always bent my arms on recovery
and entry, with my hands almost meeting in
front of my face, Terry taught us a wide-sweeping
recovery with the hands landing just outside
the shoulders. I could feel that straighter
arms were more relaxed yet increased forward
momentum.
4) After landing, I’d held my arms tense
and almost immediately clawed at the water
for my next stroke. Terry instructed us to “sink
between our arms while leaving the arms extended-but-relaxed.” He
had us swim a length with this focal point,
taking our final stroke outside the backstroke
flags. I was startled to find myself effortlessly
travelling the final six meters to the wall.
With this change, I immediately reduced my
stroke count for the 20-meter teaching pool
we used from six to four. I also felt a restful
moment within each stroke that I’d never
considered possible.
5) Where I had always relied on a powerful
stroke, and push back to climb out and move
forward, Terry instructed us to focus on a
relaxed, rhythmic interplay between gravity
and buoyancy. After sinking with gravity, we
should just let buoyancy return us to the surface.
Just before we felt the head breach, we were
to briefly “turn on” our arm muscles
in the catch position, then immediately relax
them again. I was startled to feel my head
and shoulders propel forward past my hands,
while my arms simply flew out at my hips and
forward again. As he promised this transformed
ButterStruggle into ButterFly.
6) The final piece was the sneaky breath. I
had continued to use the same breathing technique
shown in the photo from 34 years ago – eyes
forward, head up, neck tense. Whenever I’d
tried to breathe in the highly-efficient neutral
position I took in water rather than air. The
wise and resourceful TI coach, Kim Bade, reminded
me of the same trick that had turned me into
a real swimmer at 10 – to exhale explosively
just as your mouth clears the water. Suddenly,
my face was practically parallel with the water,
and I was breathing!
That morning was barely a month ago. Since
returning to Spain, I hardly want to swim anything
but Butterfly. On some lengths, I’m so
relaxed I almost feel I could go to sleep yet
keep moving down the pool. I feel much like
the African Fish Eagle in the picture – surging
forward on every stroke, while expending hardly
any energy. I almost expect to catch a fish
or two with my toes as I go.
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