Posts Tagged ‘Swim for Health and Happiness’

A Brief History Part 5: Closing the Loop — Habits, Neurons and Swim Improvement
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on April 8th, 2011

Mindful Practice — consciously merging thought and movement – creates *observable change in the brain’s infrastructure*. This improves skill, endurance and speed far more dramatically than training the body alone.

A Brief History of TI Part 4: 2003-07 – A “Study of Excellence”
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on April 7th, 2011

In most endeavors, most people stop improving fairly quickly. A few continue improving indefinitely – sometimes for decades. Four habits make this possible.

It’s not a Plateau. It’s a Crossroads.
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on April 6th, 2011

In most endeavors we improve quickly at first, but improvement slows, then stops. What happens next is a defining moment for all of us.

A Brief History of TI: Part 3 of 5
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on April 5th, 2011

TI metamorphoses from a way of *doing* swimming to a way of *thinking about* swimming . . . and by extension, about life.

A Brief History of TI: Part 2 of 5
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on April 4th, 2011

New adult swimmers – many of them triathletes – reveal to us that: (1) When it comes to swimming, humans are natural-born strugglers; and (2) Converting Struggles into Skills takes Mindful Practice of “fishlike” techniques.

Do What You Love; Love What You Do
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on March 30th, 2011

If the real goal of your athletic activity is to be happy, why defer happiness for several months by following a rigid or formulaic training schedule? Instead do what makes you feel good – physically, mentally and emotionally – and be happy NOW!

60th Birthday Practice
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on March 26th, 2011

A special practice for my 60th birthday in which every set presents an interesting problem that (i) takes keen attention to solve; (ii) is objectively measurable; and (iii) develops Skills That Win Races.*

A Practice to Improve Balance, Streamline . . . and Focus
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on March 21st, 2011

This practice specifies what to think about. That’s more important than how far you swim.

How Triathletes and Total Immersion Revolutionized Freestyle
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on March 18th, 2011

How Freestyle evolved from a ‘speed’ stroke to one that anyone can use to cover long distances effortlessly.

How to swim Distance Freestyle as easily as Breaststroke
by Terry Laughlin

Posted on March 18th, 2011

If it’s hard for you to swim continuous freestyle, but easy to do so in breaststroke, here’s a plan for applying sensations of ease and support from breaststroke to freestyle.