Posts Tagged ‘Kaizen’

The Big Idea in Swimming for the Next Decade
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on January 1st, 2010

I predict: “How Swimming Changes Your Brain” will be the most important discovery of the coming decade. This post explains why.

Why – and How – Should you Swim Easy?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on December 19th, 2009

Why you should make Ease a central goal of your swimming – and 12 specific ways to swim better through ease.

Sample #1 of “Practices that Grow Brain Cells”
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on December 18th, 2009

Most distance and marathon swimmers believe the most important thing is to “get the yards in.” I believe there’s much unexplored potential in shorter, well-crafted practices that actually create more direct benefit than long grind-it-out sessions.

Why swimmers can improve with age.
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on December 15th, 2009

If you depend on effort and physical capacity, you will slow down with age. If you learn to “solve problems” you can continue improving almost indefinitely.

Learn from Direct Experience
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on December 15th, 2009

Principles for improving your swimming (and almost anything else you value). Don’t overthink. Seek new experience. Learn from it.

Swimming to Create Brain Cells
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on November 30th, 2009

Most of us exercise for the physical workout and benefits, but the real value is in how it creates new brain cells and strengthens neural networks.
The greatest number of new brain cells will result from swimming that’s acutely focused on improving skill.

How should you practice when you only have 30 minutes?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on November 28th, 2009

When time is short, choose the practice method that will benefit you the most. Sometimes that may mean 30 minutes of 25- or 50-yard repeats!

Which is better? Pool practice or Open Water?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on November 28th, 2009

Learn to make the best use of frequently-changing tasks in pool practice to improve the ability of your brain and nervous system to “change gears on the fly” and the opportunity for long stretches of uninterrupted stroking in Open Water to deepen new skills into unbreakable habits.

What Kaizen Swimmers Can Learn from Kobe Bryant
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on November 24th, 2009

Freakishly talented, yet still average, players repeat one year of experience over and over. Kobe Bryant, even after years as the best basketball player on earth, tirelessly strives to find and improve his weak points. Continuous Improvement is wired into his brain. Is it in yours?