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Getting In!

Posted by Glenn Mills on Mar 12, 2010 08:50AM (3,116 views)

Seems that no matter what level of swimmer you are, the toughest part about our sport is simply getting in.

The weather was never something that attracted people to Ohio, where I grew up.  No matter whether we were swimming outdoors in the summer or indoors in the winter, the thought of jumping into a cold pool never excited me.  To this day, it still doesn't.   

My routine, developed over thousands of practices, is to stand with my back to the wall, as far away from the pool as possible, so I can get a short running start before diving as far out as possible.  I then streamline to the bottom with a couple dolphin kicks and a breaststroke underwater pull.  I then push off the bottom, take a single stroke to the other end, and do a flip.  As I stand ready for the run, in my mind, I know that by the time I make that turn, it's going to be OK.   But the thought of the initial shock still makes me hesitate.

The older I get, the more I find meaningless conversations more and more interesting as I delay the inevitable.  Football?  Sure.  Politics?  Sure. Taxes?  Sure. Avoiding COLD WATER?  SURE!!!

As I stood there the other day, observing the get-in practices of others, I wondered what are some of the other routines people go through.   I can't be the only swimmer who likes to delay that chilly impact.  Here are just a few observations from a single masters practice.

The first is what I like to call, The Leap of Faith.  While still not totally trusting of the water, which you can tell because this swimmer isn't going all the way under just yet, once the leap has started, there's no turning back.   You can stay high above the water to avoid the plunge for as long as possible, but there's still no way out.

Every once in a while a younger swimmer will grace the masters with his presence.  These kids almost DARE the water to mess with them.  They approach the entry with no fear and, like the swimmer above, they leap with reckless abandon toward the water.  The big difference is the defiance the youth shows as he goes totally submerged.  I call this type of entry, Those Darn Kids.

Teamwork is very important, even in individual sports like swimming.  The Strength in Numbers entry is a partner type of entry in which members hold on to each other for support and/or for dear life, depending on the temperature of the water.  These two swimmers have decided to approach their entry with disbelief, and a kind of "I don't really want to know what's coming" attitude.  Also, by referring to the first two entries, can you tell which swimmer is a bit older and wiser?

Finally, the last entry for this brief examination is... The Eddie Haskell.  This entry if for the type of person (like me as it turns out), who will feign interest in just about anything to avoid the final getting in.  The only difference is that this swimmer enters in what I consider to be the most torturous way... the slide.  Slowly lowering yourself into the bitter water, allowing it to creep up your skin inch by painful inch.  JUST GET IT OVER WITH ALREADY!

Obviously, we didn't get anywhere near covering all the various types of entries, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say... at least for me, the toughest part about this sport is... Getting In!  :)

Let us know how you get in by posting.

Thanks to our friends at TCY Masters for all the demos.




Responses

Responded Mar 12, 2010 04:22PM

At the bare minimum, I go for the "You First" entry. Let others get in first and observe their response to judge just how jarring the water temp is going to be, so I can try to mentally steel myself for my own plunge. This doesn't work well, when they react strongly though, as it makes me even more resistant to getting in, and I spend more time and energy avoiding it. Even with that though, I still continue. Oh well.

Responded Mar 12, 2010 05:25PM

With us once they're in it's ok but it's the delaying tactics, it's usually forgotten goggles, broken goggles, forgotten hat, broken hat, forgotten costume (tough I always have spares in my bottomless coaching bag). Or 'did I tell you I played football (soccer), rugby, netball, hockey etcetc and I got this injury which means I can't do the session' and my response is 'arm injury? Do it on kick! leg injury? Do it on pull, oh and you now have 400m of the warm up to catch up!!

Responded Mar 12, 2010 09:15PM

As I like the cold water it is any which way getting in and enjoying it. Apologies to all who like warm water. :}

Responded Mar 12, 2010 10:48PM

Head/brain loses more heat more quickly than any other body organ. Cap is great for initial plunge and warmup. Doing a long race (>200) with a cap is not good because you will not keep cool well.

Responded Mar 14, 2010 08:09AM

I am more the standing-"forever"-on-deck-type. I look around how the others swim and if there is any sign of uncomfortableness, I look at the pace clock and hesitate if I should go on red top or on red bottom and the funniest part is that only thinking about cold water makes me act as if I were cold at this very moment. At last I just dive in to notice that the water isn't cold at all (mostly. It just feels colder at the am than at the pm). I bet all this looks very funny :D

Responded Mar 14, 2010 08:14AM

Haha, GW, I also see all this tactics in the squad. It is very typical for young swimmers. :) My coach gives those swimmers nasty kick/ pull sets or nasty starting times. And by miricle most of the swimmers heal quite quickly hahaha :D

Responded Mar 15, 2010 10:58AM

hahahaha....Yeah....water is a healing force....we also heve swimmers like this ...

Responded Mar 16, 2010 04:25PM

Love this! I usually sit down on the edge, stick my feet in and then do the avoidance stuff you do, Glenn. Talk to anybody within earshot, stare at the water, talking to myself even. Then I'll get that now or never, and jump in, going completely under, then pushing off the bottom with a "holy crap" as I surface. But, I love the cold water for laps.

Responded Mar 16, 2010 05:02PM

That's funny, I do the same thing! Since I can remember I am notoriously on the pool deck forever before getting in, and typically I will get a running start and also dive to the bottom of the pool, do the pushoff, etc. 29 years of swimming regularly and to this day I still HATE getting in the water! It's by far the worst part. When I was younger I had one of those license plate frames that said "I'd rather be SWIMMING". One of my friends said that mine should say "I'd rather be standing on deck."

Responded Mar 16, 2010 05:24PM

Mine is mind manipulation

... i stand at the edge of the pool and imagine the water to be ice cold and frigid and not friendly. I jump, go under and generally it is never as cold as I imagined! Expectations are managed.

Responded Jan 04, 2011 07:19AM

I sit on the edge of the pool, put my feet in while I put my goggles on, and then just plop in. Because it never bothers me. Unless the heater for the pool is broken. In fact, I get annoyed with the other people delaying getting in. When someone asks me, "Is it cold?" I say, "It's never cold! Just get in!"

Responded Jan 18, 2011 11:19PM

i stand around and ask my coach some stupid question and then jump in when everyone else has...haha anything to not get cold, then my coach says if you dont get in by the top then the whole practice is fly...you should see how fast i jump into that pool after that haha(:


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