I was in a kayak today for a tri near my house. I had to help a number of people (mostly men for some reason). The panic on a few of their faces had me thinking how grateful I am that I'm so totally comfortable and at ease in the water (both open water and the pool). I've never felt anxious or scared or nervous in a race. After the race I was talking to a lifeguard friend about this, and she said what she used to tell stressed swimmers was this (sorry- a lot of this is similar to what roo suggested):
*put yourself at the back and off to the side at the start- give yourself as much open water as possible- even if it means swimming a little longer distance than the actual course.
*practice deep breathing before the race. Go off by yourself at the venue and take some deep inhalations and exhalations. Practice this daily under stressful situations so your body will learn that the breathing is a direct connection to calming yourself down.
*have a mantra to repeat to yourself to keep you calm as you swim. Whether it's "just keep swimming" or something more meaningful, repeating something in your head will distract you from the sensation of freaking out. Personally, I count strokes until I breathe. 1,2,3,4,5 breathe 1,2,3,4,5, breathe. Keeps me on rhythm and helps me to focus on something.
*practice as MUCH as humanly possible in open water. Once a week, twice a week, as much as you need to in order to feel as relaxed as you can. If you can, swim with others and try to make it a close swim so you get used to other people RIGHT around you. I know it's not nearly the same as race day, but perhaps that might help even just a little.
*always warm up before the race. Even if it means arriving extra early, just getting in and swimming a few strokes will take away the initial shock of the water and get you feeling more comfortable than just a dry start from the beach.
*sight as often as possible to make sure you're staying on course. Nothing worse than looking up and panicking because you just went way off course and have to swim extra to make it back to the buoy.
Hopefully something will help. I am a confident swimmer (although not the fastest) and even I have to say a mantra, or count or do something to keep my brain busy. Our lakes are murky and dark and I suppose that's a good thing- it keeps me from looking down and seeing all the fishes, turtles, snakes and whatnot that is swimming below me. I think if I looked down and saw a 60lb catfish, I'd probably be freaking out every time I set foot in open water.
Panic goes from 0-100 in a nanosecond in the water, so keeping that initial panic at bay is the key to keeping it away for the duration of the swim.
Keep at it, lph. You survived that first tri- it's all gravy from here on out!!![]()



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