1.
Feb 6, 2006 8:42 PM

in response to:
Grizdog
Grizdog,
Is that a typo? When you say you're trying to "swift" back and forth, do you mean "swim" or "shift" or "switch" back and forth? Please clarify.
If you're having trouble with the physical effort of the drills, or having trouble breathing, you need to go back to the very first drills and do them over and over, one lap at a time until they become comfortable. Early on the drills are just trying to get you to relax in the water and get a sense of you own balance.
Rolling onto your side, or almost all the way over onto your back, and finding your "sweet-spot" so that you can breath at will should solve your breathing problems. All of the drills have you breathing whenever you need to, and for as long as you like, by rolling to your "sweet-spot". Only in the final stage do you incorporate true swimming-breathing into your stroke.
Also, only swim one lap at a time, then stop and think through the muscle movements you need to perform before launching into the next lap. That should also give you enough time to catch your breath.
My best advice is to follow the DVD exactly as it instructs. Take it as slow as you need to in order to get it right. Do no "full-stroke" swimming at all, just the drills, as you will only reinforce the poor form you wanted to use TI to improve. As you progress through the drills you are creating new "muscle memory" resulting in a new more efficient, more economical, more effortless and more "fish-like" stroke.
I know TI works because it worked for me, and I already had a better stroke technique than most of those in my Masters swim group. Now it's even better and everybody has noticed that I'm much faster.
If you or anyone else is having trouble applying the Total Immersion methods, post your questions here and I will be happy to try and help you get it right.
Doug