Why We Swim...
Last week many of you received the U.S. Masters Swimming monthly e-newsletter, Member News from Behind the Blocks. Typically this newsletter provides you with swimming news, information and other resources. April's issue continued the tradition and offered you a variety of articles, but this month we asked you for something in return. A seemingly simple question was asked discretely on the left side of the e-newsletter. This question, plainly stated in 10-point font and a basic black text, was not intended to stump its readers; however, this question proved to not only be more poignant than expected, but it generated nearly 100 responses and became one of our most successful market research efforts.
Why do you swim?
Simple. Plain. Easy. Right?
Most of us know why we swim, but when asked to communicate these reasons, many of us struggle. To some, the question begged an answer larger than "to stay fit" or "because I do triathlons." Why do you swim? Some responses were short, sweet and to the point, others were nothing less than labors of love. Whether your response was four words or 400, your motivation will continue to affect the way that we think and act. We read every response and moved by the thoughtfulness of some, U.S. Masters Swimming wants to share some of its favorite responses.
"I swim because I feel more connected to who I am
and awake for the day."
Jenny Holzaepfel
"I swim because in this technological age, the pool is one spot where
the phone doesn't ring, email ding, nor children SING my name at the top
of their lungs!! It is one of the last bastions of quiet in a crazy, hectic
world ... (the longer the distance, the better!)."
Trish Brown
"Hi, my name is Christine and I am a swimaholic. I tell myself it
is a good addiction. However, my hair is wrecked, my skin is dry, I get
too much sun, I'm tired by 4:00 in the afternoon, and I itch. I smell like
chlorine when I sweat and my shoulders hurt if I lay on my side at night.
I look forward to my workout before I get there and I think about how great
it was when I am done. It is my time. I swim because I can and I will keep
swimming until I can't. I do it because I love it."
"I swim because it's the ‘sanity' in my stressful
life. When I am in the water I am in the present moment. Swimming is the
thing I love doing the best in my life. I am safe and at peace in the water.
"I swim because it challenges my mind, body and spirit, at age 49.
I'm amazingly at my second athletic prime, first being around 30, but at
49!
"I also swim because it is something I can do to actively help nonprofits
raise money for their cause, such as the Massachusetts Breast Cancer Coalition.
"I swim as long as I am able to. Hopefully, well into my elderly years!
Thank you."
Sally Wiesman
"WHY I SWIM: To stay alive for my kids. I got married
very late, have three young children and would love to see them all graduate
at least from high school. My youngest is Sedona (14 months) and I will
be 60 on May 5. Yipes!"
Craig Bitler
"You ask why I swim? It began when a friend invited me. I went because
I have always loved the water. It continued because it calms me and helps
me to sleep at night. It's my meditation time just for me and I love it!!
I love the opportunity to improve with the help of coaches. One serendipity
is that I have lost three sizes due to the swimming."
D. Edwards
"When you dive into the pool and the water washes over you it washes
away everything else that is going on in your life. That first rush invigorates
your body, mind and soul. The water offers you the quiet solitude that
keeps you sane. Masters is the place where you make friends with people
you would otherwise have never met. You become a network of support for
each other. You will form bonds that go way beyond the pool. Your coach
will push you to go farther and faster than you ever thought you could,
simply because he believes in you."
Why do
I swim? I swim because I love the water. I was a diver and loved the adrenaline
rush associated with falling, flipping and twisting with a grand finale
of slicing through the cool water. It's funny, when you are standing on
top of a platform, no matter how many times the announcer says, "Please
remain quiet for the competitors," the pool and its surrounding area
is composed of a million little sounds and noises, but the minute you enter
the water there is an immediate quiet that has the power to separate you
from the rest of the world. When I finished my diving career, I never thought
I'd experience that feeling again. I was terrified that I'd lose the memory.
Well, I did experience the power of the water again and it happened in
my first Masters meet. I stood on the block and I could hear everything
from the ticking of the clock to the person on the pool deck opening a
granola bar wrapper. There was noise all around me, but as soon as the
beep went off, I dove in and it was quiet, still. I do like staying in
shape, but my love of swimming is the initial plunge into the water. I
continue to swim because I long for that feeling of the loud chaos of life
mixed with nerves quickly quieted by the cool calmness of the water. Sometimes
I find it at practice, other times it takes a race. Swimming, to me, is
like living in a memory. Whether it is my memories from diving or being
7 years old at the old country club, I love to dive into the water and
"be" wherever and whenever I choose. Swimming takes me out of
noisy reality and places me in my most favorite places and times.
So, this seemingly straightforward question is no longer as simple as originally intended. It has forced us all to think, feel and remember why we continue to dive into the cold water, often at times of the day when the earliest of birds are still asleep in their nests, and endure the long workouts and damaged hair. Your responses have reminded us that there is not one single reason that we all swim. We each have our own motivation, reasons and purpose for doing what we do.
Why do you swim?
Email us at pr...@usms.org and tell us why you swim.
Ken Winterberger
AKMS web guy