Posted on August 19th, 2011
After two competitors died during the Nautica NYC Triathlon on
August 6, it was inevitable that the statistically-odd nature of how
such deaths occur was bound to grab attention again. Both fatalities
occurred from heart attacks during the (current-aided and relatively
quick) swim leg. According to the American College of Cardiology, the
risk of sudden death in a triathlon is about twice that of a marathon —
1.5 deaths per 100,000 triathlon participants compared with 0.8 deaths
per 100,000 marathon participants. Of 14 deaths that occurred in
triathlons between 2006 and 2008, 13 took place during the swim. Why is
it that over 90 percent of fatalities occur during a leg that accounts
for only 10 percent of race duration?
According to Suzanne Atkinson
M.D., a TI Coach from Pittsburgh, there’s a good chance it’s the
extreme anxiety that many triathletes feel in the chaotic conditions
following the swim start: “I work in an Emergency Room where the
percentage of fatalities is much higher than in a doctor’s office. Does
that mean ERs are dangerous? No, it means that ERs see a higher
percentage of really sick people. Similarly tri starts may not be
inherently dangerous in and of themselves, but they provoke a
‘fight-or-flight’ response in a high percentage of participants. This
causes a state of heightened adrenaline, and increased blood pressure
which greatly increase the likelihood for a sudden myocardial infarction
(what we call ‘heart attack’), dysrhythmia (rapid beating which doesn’t
allow blood to flow out of the heart), or torn aorta. If it’s going
to happen at any point in a triathlete’s training or racing experience,
it’s going to be following the start of the swim leg.”
Like Suzanne, I want to emphasize that what I write here is not meant
to infer that racing triathlons is dangerous. Your chances of becoming a
statistic are vanishingly small. But the anxiety-verging-on-panic that
is the most likely reason so many fatalities occur while swimming is a
relatively common experience. While rarely fatal, it is certain to hurt
your overall performance–and compromise your enjoyment of the sport.
Even experienced and accomplished pool swimmers can feel overwhelmed
by the confusion and congestion that routinely follows the start. Indeed
the silver medalist in the 2008 Olympic open water race, UK swimmer
David Davies, said he felt “violated by people swimming all over me.” If
an Olympic medalist feels that uncomfortable—while swimming amongst
athletes whose expertise at pack swimming rivals that of Tour de France
riders in the peloton—what chance does a triathlete have of achieving a
sense of comfort in a chaotic triathlon swim start? Well, actually a
very good chance, but first let’s examine why the fight-or-flight response occurs.
One effect of triathlon’s explosive growth is that each weekend
several thousand new triathletes—the vast majority inexperienced
swimmers who have never experienced pack swimming in open water—line up
on some shoreline to undertake the most extreme challenge in swimming—an
open-water distance swim in often-chaotic conditions. I can’t think of
another task in broad-participation sports that equals this for sheer
stress potential.
Last year, my wife Alice swam a 1.5k relay leg at the Cayuga Lake Tri
in Ithaca. I watched five waves, each with some 80 participants, start
the swim. Each time the same pattern unfolded: Following the start, 10
percent of the field swam steadily and confidently down the course.
Another 20 percent swam reasonably well in their wake. Fully 70 percent
swam uncertainly at best, barely at all in some cases, stopping
frequently, switching to breaststroke, turning on their backs. Generally
they took five to ten minutes to settle their nerves before making
steadier progress. Alice, a skilled swimmer with 30 years of pool
experience, who had swum 2 miles and more at Total Immersion open water
camps, was among those who looked overwhelmed and unable to swim at
anything like her true ability until the field spread out.
I write here to address this very common situation, not the rare
fatality. Watching this persuaded me that the great majority of athletes
have a far more urgent need to learn how to be comfortable
than how to increase speed or fitness. At least in swimming. So here is
my 4-part prescription for new triathletes to maximize their chances of
a safer, happier swim in their first–or any–race:
1. Learn Balance. This is the primary skill that gives you a sense of having control over your body
in the water. Learning to control that sinking-legs sensation, makes
you receptive to the idea of learning to control other things. Just as
important the process for learning balance is also an exercise in calm,
observant thinking. In the Total Immersion Self-Coached Workshop DVD,
Balance is the foundation for every subsequent skill. And the feeling
of effortless flotation it engenders is your strongest defense against
fear-of-drowning in an open water race.
2. Practice Mindful Swimming Replacing reactive thinking with calm, observant, reflective
thinking habits is integral to the process of learning balance and
every subsequent skill in the TI method. But what starts as a
skill-acquisition strategy lays the foundation for the most important
skill of open water racing: The ability to exert control over what and how you think in an environment where you may not be able to control much else. When teaching TI Open Water camps
I always tell our students the most important thing they’ll learn from
us is how to create a “cocoon of calm” in the midst of exterior turmoil.
3. Practice (and Race) with a Tempo Trainer An inevitable result of the fight-or-flight
response in open water is a shift to high-rate survival strokes, which
greatly increases respiration rate. Faster, shallower breaths make you
feel light-headed, making an uncomfortable situation far more so. Using
the Tempo Trainer to encode a strictly-controlled tempo in your nervous system prior to the race – then using the aural input as a tempo governor during the race will also control your respiration rate. Set the TT at 1.30 sec/stroke or slower.
4. Avoid the rush. Wait 30 seconds after the starting signal before you begin swimming, and/or start at the perimeter of the pack. TI Coach Dave Cameron
of Minneapolis says: “I remind my triathletes of pythagorean geometry:
On a 200-yard stretch, if you start 60 feet outside the most direct path
to the first buoy, you’ll only swim one yard farther to get there.”
What if Anxiety Happens?
It’s not the end of the world if you still feel your heart, breathing
and stroke rates getting away from you. Here are two tips for how to
handle that:
Hit the ‘Reset Button’ TI Coach Brian Vande Krol
of Denver is coaching a new triathlete, whose first race is next
weekend yet can only swim a few pool lengths. When Brian asked what her
goal is for the swim leg, she said it was not to panic. Brian replied
that it’s highly likely she will feel panicky at some point and
suggested she make it her goal to recover from any anxiety attack. He
advised “Go to Sweet Spot (a relaxing position designed to provide a
calm space in open water). Contemplate life and how great it is to be
living it in such a vibrant manner for a few breaths, then a few more
breaths visualizing how you want your stroke to feel, and then get back
to it in a calm, easy manner.” Learning to turn a bad experience into a
good one can be more valuable and satisfying than a race with no
adversity.
Practice ‘Yoga’ Breathing. Mike Daley,
who coaches TI in Milwaukee and Chicago has many clients from Wisconsin
where there have been three tri-swim fatalities in the last three
years. “I teach all my swimmers to use Yoga Breathing as their standard
vehicle for resting at pool’s end while practicing mindful swimming.
Rather than use the pace clock, take three to five cleansing breaths
between repeats. Focused breathing has proven effective for calming
nerves, lowering heart rates, and centering. When they feel their heart
rate elevate, they roll to Sweet Spot (we call it Otter Float) and take a
few Yoga Breaths. When they feel calm and centered, they roll face
down again and begin stroking quietly.”
Become the ‘Quiet Center.’ I personally love pack
swimming and swim better with close company than alone. A primary reason
I enjoy it so much is that it sharpens and deepens my focus. When
swimming with others in open water, I observe their strokes and turn it
into a game, testing my ability to swim with a quieter, more leisurely
stroke than anyone around me. In fact I enjoy it so much I’m sometimes
sorry to see the race end.
SOURCE IS HERE :-)
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