Good Swimming Workout

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24 Feb 2013 12:42 #95612 by
Good Swimming Workout was created by
For everyone interested in breaking out of a normal gym or run routine I have a good swimming workout that will tire you out pretty good. I kind of stole this from my old high school swimming teacher and it requires knowledge of some pretty basic strokes but it is a good alternative to normal stuff. So, here it is.

Start out in a basic 25 meter pool, and swim the following circuit as many times as you can in 30 minutes with no breaks (if you think you're going to drown then by all means take a break.) For future reference, a lap is swimming to the far wall and back.

Lap 1, front stroke then a relaxing survival backstroke
Lap 2, breast stroke, side stroke
Lap 3, back stroke, survival back stroke

The concept is to get in a good distance swim while regulating your heart rate and breathing. When you do the first half of a lap you are doing a race stroke so you are pushing yourself (50-75 percent of full speed if you're motivated.) The second half is a rest stroke, during which you are trying to relax your breathing and heart rate. During the last 5-10 minutes, try to bump up the intensity of your workout so you finish as many sets as possible.

Difficulty can be modified to swimming experience. For example, you could only swim 15 minutes and still get a decent workout in if you pushed yourself. So, there you have it. Today, I also found that this exercise is a great way to develop patience for meditation. Instead of focusing on the time you are at, you just focus on swimming the circuit. This applies to meditation because when you meditate you aren't doing it to pass the time, so why would you focus solely on the clock?

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24 Feb 2013 17:47 #95641 by Ben
Replied by Ben on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
Got any advice for people who are terrible at swimming and practically die of exhaustion after 2 lengths? :blush:

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24 Feb 2013 17:55 #95643 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout

V-Tog wrote: Got any advice for people who are terrible at swimming and practically die of exhaustion after 2 lengths? :blush:


Yeah, wear floaties :woohoo: j/k

It's something that takes time to build up to...run and do cardio to build up your stamina....when swimming take your time until the strokes come naturally, then you can pick up the pace....

Reading over that...it sounds kinda pervy...or maybe its just me :blush:

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Former Masters: GM Kana Seiko Haruki , Br.John
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Former Apprentices:Adhara(knight), Zenchi (knight)

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24 Feb 2013 18:03 #95647 by
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It is my understanding that swimming, as an exercise, is actually one of the best ones to perform (muscle-specific exercises not withstanding). I believe it uses the greatest amount of muscle groups (and so good overall performance) than any other sport. That is what I remember however I get scared of being submerged in water and can't hold my breath while swimming longer than 10 seconds so don't take my word for it :P

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24 Feb 2013 18:47 #95652 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
Scared of being submerged?....lol then you don't want to go through "drown proofing"...of course that sort of fear is a great motivator for it....

For those that don't know drown proofing is when they tie your hands behind your back, tie your feet together, and toss you in the water, you then have to swim to the surface...it's very hard and you have to keep resurfacing if you don't want to drown.....

Having said that I must emphasize DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS ON YOUR OWN, OR WITHOUT PROPERLY TRAINED PERSONEL AT STANDBY

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24 Feb 2013 20:14 - 24 Feb 2013 20:15 #95656 by Ben
Replied by Ben on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout

RyuJin wrote: For those that don't know drown proofing is when they tie your hands behind your back, tie your feet together, and toss you in the water, you then have to swim to the surface...it's very hard and you have to keep resurfacing if you don't want to drown.....

:ohmy: :ohmy: :ohmy:

What kind of a person would come up with that idea??? :laugh:

RyuJin wrote: It's something that takes time to build up to...run and do cardio to build up your stamina....when swimming take your time until the strokes come naturally, then you can pick up the pace....

Thing with me is that I can do the strokes perfectly fine, and I've always been pretty sporty and had a lot of both strength and stamina...I just can't swim very far without feeling as though I'm going to have a heart attack (and can't tread water for more than 10-20 seconds either).

As I'm relatively fit it must be something technique-based, only I don't think my technique looks obviously bad...it's a bit annoying actually, as I want to know what I'm doing wrong! :laugh:

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Last edit: 24 Feb 2013 20:15 by Ben.

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24 Feb 2013 21:08 #95660 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
Lol...drown proofing is a special forces thing..seals, force recon, sas, etc...

I'm ex navy, we all had to pass a swim test and aquatic survival...making floatation devices out of our pants, shirts, sea bags, etc...I almost qualified for seals on my first test...failed the 500 meter swim by only a few seconds...mainly due to technique...I had never learned to frog kick....guess what I know how to do now :laugh: and I can use it without a sound or splash...which is the purpose... it's very likely if you change your technique you'll be able to swim faster, further, and use less energy... I can tread water for nearly an hour with little effort due to technique...

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Former Apprentices:Adhara(knight), Zenchi (knight)

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24 Feb 2013 21:33 #95661 by Adder
Replied by Adder on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout

RyuJin wrote: Having said that I must emphasize DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS ON YOUR OWN, OR WITHOUT PROPERLY TRAINED PERSONEL AT STANDBY


^^ Seconded/bolded/underlined/shouted; lots of even strong, experienced swimmers drown (as in dead) by trying to hold their breath under water for fun or training. See Shallow Water Blackout .

V-Tog wrote: As I'm relatively fit it must be something technique-based, only I don't think my technique looks obviously bad...it's a bit annoying actually, as I want to know what I'm doing wrong! :laugh:


I have the same problem with freestyle. Otherwise I love the water, especially being underneath it - but not so much for exercise as it takes ages to wear myself out, and freestyle seems to target strange muscle groups for me.

The only thing that sort of helped me in freestyle was to focus on getting a massive breath and holding it in the upper chest as buoyancy, exhaling just before your next inhalation. Then, with that upper chest buoyancy, really rolling onto my side during the reach. The head when shoulders are horizontal is at water level, but if you roll your upper body to the side with shoulders being vertically aligned, that upper body buoyancy means you head might get a bit higher out of the water naturally. Otherwise I just sort of feel like a flailing, flapping sinking brick!!

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24 Feb 2013 22:12 #95662 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
Yeah that shallow water blackout is no joke...

The hardest swim I ever made was actually as a civilian...a mile and a half up river carrying 2 filled scuba tanks..me and a couple of friends were going scuba diving at a place near where I live called hospital hole...we didn't have a boat to take our gear up river, so we put our fins on and swam carrying the tanks...hardest swim ever...

We didn't want to waste our tanks on the swim there as the site is so deep that only nitrox divers can hope to reach the bottom...and we wanted to explore some of the hole...

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24 Feb 2013 23:19 #95666 by ren
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Just swim 3km. alternate styles and speed. always go for technique, not for brute force for a good workout. Never "rest", choose to swim slow instead (most relaxing if you really need it is on your back arms doing the equivalent of butterfly, feet doing what they should for breast stroke). To increase red cell count, do some breath-hold swimming.

For this, don't hyperventilate, don't use tools, nothing. just swim underwater until you "run out", don't push it though, once you resurface simply keep on swimming and breathing at a normal interval. swim very slowly so as to recuperate. don't take a break. as soon as you're good to go again, do so. Keep training like this (can easily do an hour a day) and you'll dramatically improve very quickly. I used to be able to swim series of 50 metres with no recuperation, just air out, back in, good for another 50. This for an hour. (I was a smoker at the time)

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25 Feb 2013 02:25 #95682 by
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V-Tog wrote: Got any advice for people who are terrible at swimming and practically die of exhaustion after 2 lengths? :blush:


Relax. Don't be concerned with moving foward. Let your breathing regulate your movements so your always breathing easy. Feel and enjoy the sensation of the water moving on your body. I think of myself as a gracefull whale slowly gliding in the water and rasing my head when I need to breath. You're exercising, being natural and having fun in the water not compeating.

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25 Feb 2013 03:17 - 25 Feb 2013 03:20 #95685 by
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This has really nothing to do with swimming but it does have something to do with water. As known by some, waterboarding is a torture technique designed to simulate drowning. I have been waterboarded 14 times voluntarily. Its stupid and dangerous but it was for a purpose. I'm deathly afraid of drowning and wanted to face my fears. Also I figured it would be good for practicing controlling panic responses. I'm now able to withstand "drowning"(loosely used wording) for about 33 seconds. To put that in perspective, CIA training operatives can on average go for about 25 seconds, if my memory serves me well. I'm not saying do this, because without proper safety and observation, you very well may drown. But I did succeed in some small way af controlling my fear. It wasn't the best or safest way, but its my way and a very direct way for me. Again this is very dangerous and don't do it.
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25 Feb 2013 03:38 #95687 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
Now I want to try it....just to test myself...

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25 Feb 2013 03:47 #95689 by
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I advise against it but if you are always have multiple people with you and some type of noisy objects in your hand so that when you need to stop you can drop them and everyone knows to stop and let you up.

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25 Feb 2013 03:49 #95690 by
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It has to be absolutely right or you could really hurt yourself.

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25 Feb 2013 04:07 #95692 by RyuJin
Replied by RyuJin on topic Re: Good Swimming Workout
I'm always willing to push my limits...I've even practiced drown proofing alone....after making very specific preparations of course....I don't recommend doing that unless you've already completed it and prepared very thoroughly... I knew what the worst case scenario was, but I also knew my preparations inside and out because I ran through multiple dry runs and had every confidence in them as well as myself...looking back at most of the stuff I did when I was younger...I was very, very wreckless...or just arrogantly confident (one of my exes made that claim)

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25 Feb 2013 12:17 #95705 by
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Well waterboarding will take a lot of confidence and determination because you are essentially drowning, something people often don't want to experience more than once.

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25 Feb 2013 14:08 #95713 by
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My roommate, my Cpl and I got bored and waterboarded eachother once... It was crazy...

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25 Feb 2013 16:00 #95717 by
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I know. Its an experience you don't forget.

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25 Feb 2013 17:51 #95725 by
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Wow that's tough! :ohmy:

I think most of us can just get swim lessions from: the Red Cross, YMCA or local recreation dept. At least in the US.

I learned to survival swim when I became comfortable letting my head bob up and down from under water to breath. I learned at Boy Scout camp as an adult when I built up to the mile swim or in my case the mile float. :) :laugh:

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