Training
Great,
But
Terrible
In
The
Meets?
You
certainly
wouldn't
want
to be
in their
shoes,
would
you?!
They
might
be
the
'favoured'
swimmers
to
win,
which
means
ALL
the
pressure
is on
them,
not
you,
and
they
see
this
young
whipper-snapper
looming
at
them
(you),
trying
to
de-rail
their
dreams!
So
always
remember,
THEY
may
be
scared
of
YOU.
Next,
it's
important
to
build
yourself
up
mentally.
Reinforce
the
positives
about
yourself
-
going
over
all
of
your
own
positive
attributes.
Literally
ask
yourself
"what's
great
about
me?"
and
begin
to
think
of
(and
write
down)
all
the
things
you've
done
in
the
past
which
made
you
feel
great
about
yourself.
(If
you
cannot
think
of
anything,
it
simply
means
you
are
not
thinking
hard
enough
-
because
EVERYONE
has
positive
attributes.
And
so
the
answer
"nothing"
is
not
only
banned
from
this
list,
but
worthy
of a
firm
kick
in
the
butt).
Last
of
all,
two
more
important
things.
It's
important
to
regularly
visualize
yourself
winning
the
races
and
swimming
fabulous
times,
imagining
a
brilliant
meet
where
you
have
nothing
to
lose,
everything
to
gain,
and
that
you're
the
'dark
horse'
who
comes
from
nowhere
and
shows
them
all
who's
boss!
The
other
thing
is to
talk
positively
to
yourself,
using
positive
affirmations
and
upbeat
thoughts
(no,
not
aloud
- in
your
mind!)
-
become
your
own
inner
'cheer
squad'
who
constantly
tells
yourself
how
great
you
are.
This
can
transform
your
results
more
than
you
could
ever
possibly
imagine.
So
to
overcome
the
'great
training/bad
meet'
blues
-
here's
the
action
plan.
Put
the
meet
in
its
true
perspective,
then
look
at
the
races
from
your competitor's
viewpoint,
build
yourself
up
mentally,
and
then
visualize
and
affirming
to
yourself
how
great
the
whole
experience
is
going
to
be.
So
if
you
find
yourself
stuck
in a
negative
pattern,
change
it.
You
can
create
your
life
into
anything
you
WANT
it to
be.
You've
got
the
action
plan,
now
the
rest
is up
to
you!
"These
'Mind
Training
for
Swimmers'
tips
are
written
by
Craig
Townsend
from
It's
Mind
over
Matter,
who
runs
mental
training
programs
from
Sydney,
Australia.
You
can
subscribe
to
his
free
swim
tips
at
his
website
http://www.swimpsychology.com
or
send
an
email
to
subscribe@swimpsychology.com
Each
tip
is
Copyright
©
Craig
Townsend
and
is
fully
protected
by
Australian
and
International
Copyright
Laws."