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I
think of myself as an Open Water (OW) swimmer who
uses Masters pool meets as helpful tuneups while
waiting for the next OW season. This weekend (it’s
Thurs May 17, as I write) I’ll swim my first
race of the 2007 OW season. This race and season
bring special challenges, which I expect to enjoy
solving. In this article, I’ll outline my “problem-solving"
approach to OW.
Most people who enter OW races think of them as
endurance tests; few see them as problems to solve.
But I find problem-solving far more creative than
simply training for endurance. And this season
brings some problems that will require as much
resourcefulness as I’ve ever employed.
As my trip
chronicle relates, I separated the AC
joint of my right shoulder 10 weeks ago in a mountain
bike race in Taupo, New Zealand. At the time I
feared that my OW season might be lost, or perhaps
much compromised. Following doctor’s orders
to rest it for a month (I cheated a bit), I began
swimming again in late March though still feeling
considerable pain – which raised concerns
that I’d torn something in addition to the
separation, I swam very light mileage, mostly gentle
drills. By late April my shoulder finally showed
improvement and on May 11 I received an encouraging
diagnosis. My lingering pain was due to an inflamed
radial nerve, nothing that sound training would
aggravate.
So here are the stimulating challenges I face.
After being honored as the 2006 USMS Long Distance
All-Star for the 55-59 age group, easily the most
distinguished swimming award I’ve ever earned,
my goal this season is to win it again – by
scoring better than any swimmer in my age group
in a series of five USMS OW championships. Two
fall on the final two weekends in May – the 5K in Fort
Myers FL May 19 and the 1-Mile in Reston VA May
27. Having championship events at the very outset
of the season is unusual.
The obvious complication for me is swimming high
stakes races just a few weeks after resuming normal
training after a 2-month recovery from injury.
The second complication is that, to retain All-Star
honors, I’ll need to swim well through all
five races including a 10K July 14 in Huntington
Bay NY, a 3K Aug 4 in Pend Oreille ID and the 2-Mile
Cable championship Aug 18 in Lake Placid.
Under ideal conditions I’d prepare for such
a demanding season by building a fitness base during
May, giving no thought to being race-sharp. I’d
be doing longer practices and repeat sets to develop
a foundation of general fitness for more race-specific
practices to begin in early July. At the same time,
I’d concentrate just as much on technique
development, using the longer sets to more deeply
imprint elusive or subtle aspects of awareness
or coordination.
This year I must not only build a fitness base,
but regain fitness lost while also trying to approximate
championship form for two key races on consecutive
weekends. Well, it’s definitely a balancing
act, but one I enjoy tackling.
General Fitness
I consider my stroke efficiency a “lifetime
work in progress” and expect that each year,
it will be measurably better than the year before,
balancing the effects of also being a year older.
Still, when I elevate my competitive goals, I also
feel compelled to improve my physical makeup. Some
people are “born athletes.” I’m
not. I tend to put on weight with dismaying ease
and lack natural power or speed. Last year, to
give myself a realistic shot at breaking national
records I lost 15 lbs. and am sure that helped.
I did no weight training, as I remained leery of
injury, after rupturing a biceps tendon while doing
bench presses. My weight drifted back up over the
past eight months, about half of that since my
recent injury. So I’m trying to include as
much land fitness activity as I can while resuming
water training. And while combining all this I
have to be mindful of how much activity a 56-year-old
can tolerate without exhaustion. Here’s
how I’m doing it.
Cycling
This is as much for environmental concerns and
pure enjoyment as fitness. Once the average daytime
temperature reached the high 40s, I stopped using
my car for local transportation. I’ve outfitted
an old mountain bike with road tires, a basket
and rack with bag. I ride it to the pool where
I train, the TI offices and Swim Studio, the gym
and yoga studio and local stores. Such errands
require a daily or twice-daily 30- to 60-minute
round trip, some of which is hilly – with
the flat parts along a scenic rail trail. Cumulatively – though
I haven’t done any cycling purely as training – I’m
riding 50 or so miles a week. I don’t know
how many calories consumed or “aerobic points” that
earns me, but I’ll take whatever I get. Besides
which it’s fun and saves a couple of gallons
of gas a week.

Weight Training
The
American College of Sports Medicine recommends
two sessions of resistance training and three
sessions of aerobic activity per week, for
all adults after
age 35, to counter the loss in fitness and
increase in fatness that accompany aging. These
recommendations
are simply for quality of life, not athletic
ambitions. I had not done weight training since
injuring myself
in Oct 2004. In April I rejoined the local
gym and have since done a 20-minute weight
training
workout three times a week. I do nine exercises,
alternating four lower body with five upper
body stations. I choose activities that combine
several
major muscle groups, rather than those that
isolate muscles, to emphasize muscle-integration.
I also
include as much “unstable” exercise
as possible. For example, rather than barbell bench
presses – which I was doing when my biceps
tendon detached from the bone – I do dumbbell
alternate-arm-presses, while balancing my shoulders
on a large ball. I can’t lift nearly as much
weight, but activate much more muscle, because
I have to use core muscle to remain aligned and
stable – just like in swimming. I do
one set of 10 to 15 reps at each station and
try to
increase the amount of weight or number of
reps in each exercise. When
I can complete 15 reps, I increase the weight.
Yoga
When
asked why I swim, I often say “So I
can be strong, supple and graceful at age 85.” I
feel yoga is the ideal complement to swimming
in this pursuit. It’s also had a significant
impact on the swimming as well, teaching me
the satisfaction mindfulness and practicing
with intention
can bring. I was unable to do yoga for nearly
two months after hurting my shoulder. When
I resumed
regular practice in mid-April, my lack of yoga
fitness made me tired – and I felt that
fatigue affecting my swimming. But on May
1 I had a revelation, and
my practice has been stronger and free of fatigue
ever since. Yoga creates a powerful synthesis
of whole-body strength, suppleness and injury
resistance.
In yoga my muscles work against natural resistance
in ways that are remarkably similar to how
I use them in swimming, while also providing
a
great
balance to the physical stresses of intensive
swim training. As well, it has done more than
anything
else in accelerating the healing of my shoulder.
Initially I couldn’t do certain poses
that include pushup-like movements, but my
shoulder
strength and freedom of movement has progressed
much faster since I resumed yoga practice.
I attend two to four 75-minute classes per
week. And because
75 minutes is pretty close to the time it takes
me to swim a 5K, it nicely approximates the
work-duration of my first race. If I could
make the time to practice
yoga every day I would.
Swimming
In some ways, though my fitness is still compromised,
I feel it will be easier to prepare for the
5K race – which should take 75 to 90 minutes,
than the mile which should take about 25 minutes.
During the 5K, I’ll take nearly 5000 total
strokes – i.e. 5000 opportunities to
save energy or use it more effectively. While
my potential competitors train to tolerate
long bouts of hard work, I train to find the
easiest way to attain goal paces. Thus the
longer the
race, the more I can potentially gain through
economy.
On the TI Discussion
Forum, the topic of the “Opportune
Injury” has received much attention. I’ve
treated my latest injury as another opportunity
to improve my stroke efficiency. Having to swim
gently is an altogether healthy influence as its
effects will directly benefit long distance economizing.
Prohibited from putting pressure on my shoulder,
I’ve concentrated on four focal points:
1) Light-pressure catch. Reducing
the pressure on my catch not only promotes
healing, it also
helps keep my elbow higher and more stable
as I begin my stroke. This results in a firmer
catch
and stronger link to core power. In training,
whenever
I reduce pressure on my hand and forearm at
the beginning of the stroke, my pace improves – as
does my ability to sustain it while feeling
relaxed.
2) More leisurely catch. I also
focus on taking a bit more time for my hand to
pass under my elbow
at the beginning of each stroke. The more leisurely
my catch, the more I seem to get out of each
stroke. Naturally, taking more time also contributes
to
relaxation.
3) More parallel ankles. My
2-Beat Kick (2BK) delivers more power by synchronizing
better with my stroke,
when I keep my feet closer together. The focus
on parallel ankles forces me to maintain more
lateral stability in body position and seems
to concentrate
the power produced by the kick – more
effect for the same, or less, effort.
4) Kicking from the core. In
the last three years I’ve gotten unprecedented power from my 2BK.
But I’ve also found my legs fatigued near
the end of several pool races, cramping on pushoffs.
I realized gradually that this was a result of
overdoing the power of my leg drive. Only in the
last few weeks have I begun learning to temper
that power. While focusing on relaxation and energy
conservation during the last two months I’ve
also discovered that by feeling the 2BK originate
in my core, rather than my thighs (which comes
easier when I keep my ankles more parallel)
I also generate just as much power with less
muscular
force.
I’ve not swum a single stroke in the past
two months without thinking about one of these
focal points, and during my 5K May 19, I’ll
focus on one or another during each of my approximately
5000 strokes.
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