Posts Tagged ‘Mastery’

Love the Plateau.
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on October 29th, 2010

Progress toward Mastery is made up of many “routine” practice days, interspersed with relatively rare thrilling leaps forward. It’s the quality of your progress on the routine days that produce the thrilling leaps.

Who is your Master?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on October 27th, 2010

How could I truly pursue Mastery without choosing a Master?

How would Einstein teach swimming? Balance, Streamline, Propel.
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on October 26th, 2010

Balance, Streamline, Propel is TI’s “Elegant Solution.” Whatever stroke, skill, or goal you’re pursuing, you’ll improve faster, easier if you master them in that order.

Warmup ‘Happens’: How to Prepare for Practice
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on October 26th, 2010

If you view swimming as a Workout , you start with a Warmup. If you view swimming as a Practice you prepare differently.

One Advantage of Human Swimmers over Dolphins
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on September 21st, 2010

We become More Fully Human when we seek to be More Like Dolphins in the water.

Should you ‘perfect’ a skill or move on?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on September 5th, 2010

If your form in an advanced skill, or whole stroke, is quite good, why seek to improve your form in a more basic skill.

Can Michael Phelps still be Michael Phelps on less training?
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on August 23rd, 2010

Could TI-style training help Michael Phelps — and other “adult” elite swimmers?

A Human Being Should be able to . . .
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on August 19th, 2010

. . . “Build or fix your own stroke and adapt and imprint it for distance or speed . . .”

Swim Practice as Soulcraft
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on August 19th, 2010

Hands-on work — solving problems, fixing something, getting a tangible result — brings a satisfaction often lacking in the “knowledge economy” — making conference calls, sending emails, filling out spreadsheets. Improving your stroke brings the same sense of empowerment and accomplishment as fixing “stuff.”

Move with grace at the end of the race.
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on July 27th, 2010

Whether yoga poses, or your swimming stroke, strive to make them More Beautiful, rather than “right.”