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I’ve practiced yoga on and off for 15 years,
more regularly since turning 50, receiving countless
valuable insights in the bargain. Last week, on
May Day, our teacher suggested an intention, based
on the Celtic festival Beltane, to merge the “male
and female nature” in ourselves. As Carrie
explained, the male nature is Doing while the female
nature is Receiving. Being habitually a Do-er,
I decided to Do Less and Receive More during class.
Because I’d been traveling most of the previous
two months, and had attended only two classes in
that time, I felt a distinct lack of “yoga
fitness.” Two days earlier I attended a similar
class led by the same teacher. After 75 minutes
I was whipped. But after focusing on Receiving,
I felt fresh, indeed energized!
Receiving, of course, is a suggestion, not an instruction,
and takes imagination to put into practice. Here’s
how I practiced Receiving in yoga: In any movement
that involved bending or sinking, I focused on
feeling myself just respond to gravity. In any
movement that involved lifting, or supporting,
I focused on feeling as if my arm or leg simply
floated up – or on a feeling of “physical
expansiveness.” I also focused on using core
muscle while keeping my limbs relaxed.
The contrast between these two classes exactly
mirrored swim practices I’d done on the two
preceding days. On April 29, I’d swum 5000
yards focused on relaxed hands and arms, and
a leisurely stroke. I finished feeling completely
fresh. The next day, though I swam only 3000
yards,
my focus on creating propulsion with my arms
left me dog tired.
Most triathletes instinctively feel it’s
necessary to Do much to prepare for an endurance
swim – more yards for fitness; harder laps
for speed. But a focus on Receiving is ideal for
swimming longer distances. In Feb, 2002, though
I’d swum little in previous months, I registered
for the Manhattan Island Marathon Swim, leaving
myself only four months to prepare. Though most
other entrants swam approximately 450 miles in
those four months, in pursuit of extraordinary
fitness, I trained just 180 miles, devoted entirely
to practicing “extraordinary economy.” I
completed the 28.5-mile swim in 8 hours and 53
minutes with no post-race fatigue or soreness.
In 2006, I repeated this approach, completing
the distance in about 8 hours, and finishing
in the upper half
of the field, though I was one of the oldest
participants.
A focus on Doing Less in swimming will bring
particular benefits in a triathlon, leaving you
far fresher
for the bike and run. And perhaps the experience
may encourage you to think about how to Do Less
back on land. Here are tips for Receiving Swimming
Endurance:
Receive Air.
Breathing easily is essential to swim a long
distance without fatigue. And Receiving Air is
the best way to do it. Focus on an active exhale
to fully clear your lungs
and they’ll fill effortlessly on the inhale, since nature abhors a vacuum.
Practice this by listening to the bubbles coming from your nose the entire
time your face is in the water. Or try regulating your speed or effort in a
training
set by the energy of your exhale. Exhale gently while swimming more easily.
To swim faster, try simply increasing the intensity of your exhale.
Give in to Gravity.
Inexperienced swimmers often waste vast amounts of energy trying to stay afloat.
But the human body’s natural position is to have 95% of our mass submerged.
We swim through the water, not over it. Rather than fight gravity, relax into
the water. An unexpected dividend of giving in to gravity is that there’s
much less drag below the surface than right at it. To practice this in training
by: (1) Relax your head and neck completely and allow the water to support its
weight. (2) Let your hand sink below your forearm on entry – fingers
pointing down. These actions should help you feel your hips and legs become
lighter.
Take the path of least resistance.
Our instincts incline us to muscle our way through the water especially the
chop or waves we may encounter in open water. But water resistance is much stronger
than any power we can generate. Instead, cut through chop with a long, sleek
bodyline. Rather than pushing water back with your hand, focus on spearing
it forward, then lining up head, torso and legs to follow your arm through
the “channel” it
creates as it spears forward into the water. The other hand will be pushing
back as you do; just let it happen while you concentrate on the one going forward.
Soften your hands.
When we were young, most of us were taught to turn the hand into a flesh-and-bone
paddle for moving more water. But a relaxed hand not only holds water perfectly
well; it’s also more sensitive to the best way to work with the water.
Right now, hold your arm forward with your hand hanging limp from your wrist.
If your hand is like this as it spears forward, it will help your balance and
be in a better position to hold water as you stroke. If your fingers separate
during recovery and as you begin your stroke, you’ve got it right. If they’re
pressed together, your hand is too tense.
Receive awareness.
Because the water is dense and completely enveloping, we swim through a literal “sea
of sensation” receiving more input from our surroundings than in any
land sport. But first you must pay attention. The most effective way to heighten
awareness
is to simply listen. Anything you do more quietly in the water will be more
efficient. Quieter means a hand entering more cleanly, a foot working more
effectively and
a body more streamlined.
Receive success.
If you do enter a race, your best strategy is to not race. Virtually everyone
else – unless they practice Total Immersion techniques – will work
too hard in the first 100 to 300 meters then spend the next 1200 or more meters
slowing down. When they do, you won’t have to chase them; they’ll
be swimming back to you. To make this work for you, just pick one of the focal
points I suggest above – likely the one that makes your stroke feel best – and
give that your full attention from the start, while everyone else is thinking
about racing. Just keep practicing your focus, one relaxed stroke after another.
Before long, without even trying, you’ll notice yourself passing other
swimmers. Enjoy!
Terry Laughlin’s latest book is Extraordinary Swimming for Every Body.
In 2006, he broke two U. S. Masters 55-59 long distance swimming records by
practicing what he teaches. Read more of his articles at www.totalimmersion.net.
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