Positive Values

January 4, 2010 at 10:45 am | Posted in Motivation, Sixteen positive values | Leave a comment
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This was written for me by a swimming coach and a very good friend of ours Juicy Lucy from the UK swimclub.

Sixteen positive values
 

Sometimes swimmers feel like laboratory animals, in their artificial environment. But from the presence of our training partners, competitors, and supporters we gain some very human skills and qualities. Here we list sixteen positive values we can gain from swimming:

1. Fitness – almost every study ever done says that swimming is the best overall sport to achieve fitness and health. In swimming we can step onto the fitness ladder at any age – and keep going up.

2. Self-confidence – swimming training teaches us that we can overcome adversity and improve ourselves, both with and without the help of others.

3. Discipline – it’s never too late to learn that structure and discipline are the bedrock of success in swimming and life outside the pool.

4. Teamwork – train alone if you like, but you’ll learn in swimming that team-mates will encourage, lead, contribute and receive in training groups.

5. Sportsmanship – swimming is a friendly sport in which we can apply and learn good practice. In swimming we compete ‘with’ other swimmers, as well as ‘against’ them.

6. The work ethic – swimming teaches us that hard work and application can overcome and overtake mere ‘talent.’

7. Delayed gratification  – swimming is a tough sport in which there are no instant rewards. We learn that today’s learning may be tomorrow’s winning edge, today’s investment tomorrow’s dividend. All swimmers know that success takes time and application.

8. Time management – if you want to swim, then you’ll make and create the time to do it. Exam time and heavy homework schedules often eat into training sessions. You should be able to manage both – but always keep the thought at the back of your mind that revision for exams must come before swimming.

9. Dedication – all sportsmen, but swimmers in particular, learn early on that they have to balance their priorities: for excellence in one field we may have to make sacrifices elsewhere.

10. Skill improvement – swimming requires skills, and requires swimmers to learn and re-learn skills as they progress. Swimmers learn that listening, learning, and paying attention to details are essential to improvements.

11. Friendship and respect – swimming forces you to respect the efforts of your training companions. In this way friendships are based on shared values.

12. Goal setting – a life-long lesson comes from setting yourself attainable goals and learning how to achieve them. Learn also how to cope when you fall short of your ideal.

13. Gender equality – Americans are just coming to terms with this, but in the UK we’ve known for some time that men and women suffer equally in training and can be as competitive as each other. Swimming is a non-sexist sport.

14. Appreciate your supporters – you may have mum and dad ferrying you around, but swimmers know deep down how their parents and friends are their supporters, and of the sacrifices they make for another’s enjoyment and success.

15. Courage – swimmers learn to face hardship in training and competition. Stepping into the training pool can be very daunting, but swimmers learn that these misgivings can be overcome.

16. Compassion – swimming teaches us to have sympathy for those who strive and struggle but sometimes fail to come up to scratch. It helps when others are compassionate to us!

Think like a Champion

January 3, 2010 at 10:25 pm | Posted in Motivation, Think like a champion | Leave a comment
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This was written for me by a swimming coach and a very good friend of ours Juicy Lucy from the UK swimclub.

THINK LIKE A CHAMPION
 

Another year ahead. Great! There are lots of opportunities out there for you to step up and claim great results for yourselves, providing you put in the necessary groundwork.

You have to be bold to be a winner

A new year signals the time to take stock of what you’ve achieved and what you’ll be working towards. Set clear goals of where you are going and how you are going to get there – write them down and agree them with your coach and parents. Never be bashful – aim high. It’s better to miss your target because it was over-ambitious, than be silently holding yourself back by settling for soft targets. Decide to take bold action and go for broke – you have to be bold to be a winner.

The more confident you feel,  the more brave you can feel. Go public with your goals and if you don’t quite get what you targeted, tell yourself it’s your reaction to this that matters and not the comments of others.

Beware of the dream-busters

Being the best does not necessarily make you everyone’s favourite. There will be the dream-busters poking fun and doubting you  -  “Oh look at her, she didn’t do so well, has she got the ability?”

Always remember, it’s what you think to yourself that matters. You are going to have to be tough to stand out in the crowd so start focusing on what matters to you and your own views.

The route to glory/excellence is strewn with setbacks and challenges, and it’s the one who is the most adaptable and determined who will be driven to overcome them. How do you think you learned to walk?…by trying to walk again and again, although that horrible little boy next door laughed at you every time you stumbled. Make a firm decision to do whatever it takes and go for gold.

Imagery training

Imagery and visualisation – mean the same thing – seeing in your mind’s eye a series of pictures representing a past (or future) performance (a bit like watching a video of yourself). I always find these terms can be slightly misleading as there appears to be an emphasis on ‘seeing’ and the other senses can be forgotten in ‘imagery training.’ You will also hear ‘imagery training’ referred to as ‘mental rehearsal.’ Whichever term you choose to use you should be aiming to include the use of all your senses to conjure up the experience of competition and your performance. You’re likely to find you’ll be stronger at visual images (pictures) but learn to develop your use of the other senses.

You should aim to mentally rehearse regularly – the more you do it, the better you will become, and it’s a great confidence builder. Let’s say, aim to run through your race in your head at least 3 times daily. You will become pretty expert at pre-playing your race. Also time yourself and you will be able to rehearse to within a second of your best time.

Competition is stressful

Regularly change the venue of your mental rehearsal – cars, buses, supermarkets, busy high streets – in this way you’ll be grooming yourself to focus your attention in uncontrolled environments. Competition is stressful and the venue is as you find it, so learning how to focus on you, and the task in hand, will go a big way in helping you to put in your best performance. You must be able to block out what you can’t control, and be absolutely self-focused.

Rehearse what you want

Use mental rehearsal to pre-play how you want your performance to be and replay what went well. The advantage is that you control the feedback and focus/reinforce good practice. It’s also useful for overcoming problems, practising new skills, and is useful when you are out of the pool with an injury. It gives you something to distract yourself with before anxiety and automatic negative thoughts start to play havoc. Rehearse what you want, not what you don’t want.

 

There is good research now to support the benefits of mental rehearsal and it is understood that neural pathways required for the performance are strengthened. It is best explained as beating a path through the jungle – the more you beat out the path, the more defined it becomes.

Focus on the experience 

Try this – Imagine yourself on the block and exploding off like a bullet. Now write down what you see, what you hear, what you are touching/feeling, what you smell and what you taste. Select an occasion when your start was like grease-lightning, to help you to focus on the experience.

Check out what you’ve recorded – how clear was your recall of the dive? Were there any senses which were more easily stirred up? Were you seeing it through your goggles?

Checking out your record of the dive will give you pointers on how you can brush up your imagery skills. Make this your year – if you don’t claim it for yourself, someone else will!

Personal Goals

January 3, 2010 at 10:13 pm | Posted in Motivation, Personal Swimming Goals | Leave a comment
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This was written for me by a swimming coach and a very good friend of ours Juicy Lucy from the UK swimclub.

PERSONAL GOALS

Ask yourself the following three questions at the start of every day.

1. What am I going to do today to take a step forward toward my true potential?

2. How will I approach what I do today to get the best out of my swimming?

3. What will I do today to ensure that I stay positive, focused, and happy?

The questions here can be directed to your swimming life. Choose something that is important in your swimming right now and respond to the questions, keeping in mind what you’ve selected. It is best to find a quiet time and place where you can thoughtfully write down your answers. It is also best to do this exercise perhaps once or twice a year. Your responses can guide your course and become your destiny.

1. ULTIMATE GOAL (LONG TERM) What is your big vision or long-term dream goal in swimming? What is your potential in the long run if you accept the possibility of unlimited possibilities?

2. ULTIMATE GOAL (THIS YEAR) What is your ultimate goal for this year? What is possible if you really open doors within yourself and get everything on track this year? Maybe a win in your club championships, a place at the Counties, or a final at the Nationals?

3. REALISTIC GOAL What is a realistic goal for you to attain this year (based on where you are now, your potential for improvement, and how much you want to get there)?

4. SELF ACCEPTANCE GOAL Can you make a commitment to accept yourself as a worthy human being and learn from this experience, regardless of whether you achieve your goals this year?

5. STATE-OF-MIND GOAL Can you set a specific goal for this year related to your state of mind, attitude, mental readiness, confidence, peacefulness, or happiness?

6. FOCUS GOAL Can you commit yourself to focusing fully (following your best focus) in every performance and for the important parts of every day?

7. DAILY GOAL Can you set a goal every day to do something that will bring you one little step closer to where you want to be? Write down one or two things you want to accomplish today. Act on your daily goals in some positive way every day.

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