Saturday 28 January 2012

Sea Breezers Swim practice

Our first swim in 2012, with our lucky Gnarly nutters hats, after planning our calendar of Dover, Poole and open water swims. By the time we get into the sea in September we will have done at least 11 Dover swims conditioning ourselves for the cold, the rain, the waves and the dark waters.


We also plan to spend some days at the swimming pool where we get in and out, so that we experience the challenge of a 90 minute swim repeated over 12 hours, and I confess a sense of relief that we will at least be physically fit if we do everything we plan as a base and build on that to meet our calendars.

Today was 60+ lengths of the 33 meter long pool in Putney. What was lovely
was the connection and joy I felt towards three talented, powerful and inspirational women, as we were all motivating and coaching each other, sharing fears, hopes and dreams, and crafting our approach to the challenge. It will be something special that when we've done it, we'll be linked in that way that only people who've been through something tough together know.

Friends forever, a deep rooted trust in each other, and a story to tell our future generations. Here's to an extraordinary 2012, I am so proud to be part of this crew :)

Tuesday 17 January 2012

Drafting for a friend

Ever heard of Drafting? Not to do with drawing, but in terms of swimming! The aerodynamics that happen when you follow someone in the water. I have only experienced it a couple of times, initially believing that my swimming had suddenly become so much faster and then being corrected by Moralee (one of the 'sea breezers' swimming the channel).

Last night I had the privilege of tucking in behind Juliette, and frankly, I loved it, it is an extraordinary feeling of being supported in the water and pulled without force. We swam 100 lengths in different sets, yes that's 2k if you do the maths (thanks Pete :). The only caveat, you have to keep up the pace, and try not to let the gap between you get too big so that you get the full benefit. It's hard because there is always that temptation to take an extra breath at the end, but the lack of air is outweighed by the gift of the pull. I read up on it this morning, if you swim 0-50 cm from the toes of the swimmer in front you increase your performance by as much as 21% - we could all use that in life!!

Who do you draft for in life? Who creates the draft for you? We all need an extra bit of support now and then to feel a bit faster, a bit better, a bit stronger and a bit more capable. If you've been drafting for me you know who you are, and I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart.

And Juliette, please swim in the middle lane again next week....

Thursday 12 January 2012

Swimsuit dramas - not for the faint hearted

It's hard enough buying swim wear for holidays, but swimwear for proper swimming is a whole new story. Apparently in my first 6 months of swimming I was wearing the wrong one because it was too big (they should be tight enough that you should be able to run in your swimsuits girls), in search of a wetsuit the assistant persuaded me to buy a 'smaller than normal' speedo endurance, and it was frankly perfect.
So, imagine my excitement when I ordered a new speedo, titled LZR Pro, with special water repellant attributes, nice and tight, so tight, it prevented a deep breath and not sure whether I would have stayed fully in it (if you get my jist), so, with faith I ordered 2 sizes larger, and it fitted ok ish...

Picture the scene.
Hot shower before getting in the pool (amazing how few people do), slightly odd feeling of water gathering around my nether regions, distracted by water sitting on the surface of the costume in droplets and marvelling at the 'repellent' fabric. Too many splashy men in the deep end so I get in the shallow end to swim with the 'ladies what lunch'.

Enter the pool, feeling smug about how my new suit will give me the 'edge'. Then the dawning realisation that the suit has two layers, and in between them is filling up with water. As I swim, it literally wafts from side to side, like a fat suit, rippling around me and making me anything but streamlined in the pool. I stop at the end and stand up, watching the water gather in a pregnancy shape of around 6 months in my stomach, it requires me to press it to release the water.

I was so much in the mood to try for another full hour swim :( In the end I manage 40ish lengths realising the reason I need to keep hooking my suit out of my bottom cheeks is because of the weight of the water at the front. In the end in exasperation I give up, haul myself out, and realise that the water has then created a full nappy (diaper for the canadians reading this) appearance for all to see.

Sigh. Swimming is already sooo unattractive, mascara problems no matter how much you remove, red marks from the goggles that last 2+ hours afterwards and definitely are impacting my eye bags, the stink of chlorine that never seems to go, the dryness of my skin, the discolouring of my hair, and a pink stretchy hat, its somehow more manageable with a suit that fits.

Now for the reality check... In truth this is all tiny in comparison the challenges faced by the people we will be honouring when we swim the channel, those who survived cancer, and those who fought bravely through it and didn't. They wouldn't care a jot about a swimsuit malfunction, so in the interest of perspective, I giggled with my mum, my kids and my husband about the nappy and fat suit look, and bless my life that this is as hard as it gets.

Tuesday 10 January 2012

The year of the swim

Deep breath and dive in!

4 swim sessions in 10 days, it is the pattern that needs to continue to get prepared for September. Saturday 7th January was one of those days where the water supported me, and the swimming was natural, it doesn't happen often, but it happens often enough to believe.

I committed to myself to swim for an hour, in the end it was 120 lengths (nearly 2 miles in one hour), wrapped up as 100m packets alternating front crawl and then front crawl with pool buoy, it's cheating, but it means my arms and neck are getting used to the constant rotation. For a change I only stopped after half an hour, more because I could than because I needed to, and that in itself is a breakthrough.

Tomorrow I am meeting the wonderful people who were at the retreat I attended in October in Spain, and I am excited to share with them the continuing breakthroughs that they helped me initialise with positive thoughts, words and beliefs, we all need people around us to keep our own stories real (the gremlins often interfere :). At the Gnarly Nutters swim club on monday one of the newer (yup even newer than me!) moved into 'our lane' and commented on how wonderful it was to swim with others vs on her own.

I'm not surprised, Pete told me my swimming development was now about training with others, our natural competitiveness, desire to belong, connection and inspiration from people all drive us to perform above and beyond our own self limiting beliefs. I would never have agreed to this challenge without being part of a team of inspirational, talented, beautiful and powerful women.

Here's to the day I can swim for a full 90 minutes in a pool and perhaps in the sea...ever onwards...