Cant swim for toffee
As I have already mentioned on this blog I am a very very poor swimmer (I will soon be posting a video to show you just how bad). The most I ever swam in one go, was about 20m, as a child.
Lots of my new goals and challenges will involve swimming, so I will be taking swimming lessons over the coming months. I took some total immersion swimming lessons at the start of the year because I was hoping to do a quadrathlon this year. I am now doing it next year instead so the swimming stopped for a few months.
Open water – a whole new kettle of fish
Most of the goals and challenges I am doing are in open water swimming which introduces a whole host of new fears, which I will address once I have mastered them, I am not there just yet. Also just to be clear this blog post is about addressing fears when learning to swim and does not address having a phobia of water.
2 main fears
For most people I believe that if they can stand in the water with their feet on the ground and the water is below their shoulders then they are quite happy, and have little or no fear , even people who cant swim tend to be happy enough at this point. The two main fears are when people can no longer touch the ground or grab the side of the pool, or when their face is under the water.
As this is part one, I will deal with the first fear you will encounter and that’s putting your face in the water when swimming. Fear might seem like a strong word but if when your swimming you cant keep your face under the water, coming up for air from time to time of course
, then there must be an element of fear somewhere?
Back to fear #1
When I took the first few lessons, the first task was to get me swimming with my head down and face in the water, this didn’t go too well. I was snorting water, or breathing out of my nose so fast I managed to stay under the water for just a few seconds.
This was partly down to to my natural survial instinct kicking in and part fear of having my face in the water. I needed to take control and be calm and relaxed, which is easier said than done.
If your not comfortable with having your face in the water, then you will keep it out of the water when swimming and this will knock out your balance in the water. This has a knock on effect of making it harder to swim, and harder to stay afloat, which leads to even more problems.
Overcoming the fear
However you don’t want to spend hours and hours in the pool just trying to get comfortable with having your face in the water. So whats the solution?
Equipment
- 1 x large bowl of water
- 1 x small mirror
- 1 x goggles
- 1 x towel
Steps
- Put the bowl of water on the table
- Put on your goggles
- Place the mirror at the bottom of the bowl of water
- Take a deep breath
- Put your face in the water (make sure you can see your face in the water, mainly nose and mouth)
- Breath out very slowly through your nose
The aim of this exercise is to make you comfortable breathing out under water, and although the thought (and sight) of you practising in your kitchen may seem ridiculous, it really does work! I went from breathing out like a volcano and needing air within a very short amount of time to being able to calmly keep my face under water for quite a long time with tiny bubbles trickling out of my nose (nice images huh). I manged to make big improvements with just 2 x 10 minute sessions, both carried out the two evening before my second swimming class. My swimming coach even commented on how much more relaxed I was in the pool as a result.
Pointers
- make the bubbles as small as possible
- make them trickle out of your nose, not shot out
- try and increase the time you can spend breathing out of your nose under water
- relax as much as possible (i noticed that my shoulders were very tense when I started this exercise)