When the pressure is on, and it’s time to strap on your racing goggles and tech suit and smash on some personal best times, mental toughness is critical.
Mental toughness helps you stay focused in the midst of chaos. Manage your intensity levels. And stay on track no matter what is happening in the lane next to you.
Look…
We both KNOW that not everything is going to go perfectly on race day. Your goggles spring a little leak. Your suit rips off the start. The competition drops a record-shattering time in the lane next to you.
Your job isn’t to try and control EVERYTHING.
It’s to practice and prepare your reaction to adversity so that no matter what happens, you stick to YOUR plan.
Here’s a highly practical 3-step plan you can use mental imagery to be mentally tough on race day.
“You are always ready for whatever comes your way.”
Mental imagery is a powerful and proven mental skill for swimmers. The applications are a-plenty:
- Want to master a skill? Mental imagery can help you learn that skill or new technique.
- Want to get motivated? Mental imagery has been shown to be a more effective motivational tool than psych-up talk.
If there is something you want to improve in the water, there is a way mental imagery can help you.
Including preparing you for the unexpected adversity that happens in competition (or practice, for that matter).
Michael Phelps is well-known for having used visualization in his preparation.
Each night in bed, after he got himself relaxed, he would close his eyes and run through his events in his mind.
But Phelps did something that was really smart with his visualization. He didn’t just picture his *perfect* race; he ran alternate outcomes and variations.
Using mental imagery to prepare for adversity
Here’s how to put this tool to work for you and your swimming.
Grab a pen and a piece of paper.
Write out the scenarios where you have struggled in practice and in competition.
Get down and deep with the situations and scenarios where things fall off the rails for you in the pool.
For example:
- I have a hard time swimming in discomfort. I save energy when I know shouldn’t.
- I get in my head before big races.
- I have a hard time bouncing back if I don’t swim as fast as I should.
You get the idea.
Writing out the issues and adversity in the water isn’t too difficult. We KNOW what they are.
It’s the next step that is the fun part.
You are going to close your eyes, breathe deeply, and let your body sink into the floor.
Using mental imagery, walk yourself through the thing you have struggled with in the past (and are likely to again in the future).
Feel it. Feel the moment. Everything about the situation should be in your visualization. The temperature of the water. The chlorine in the air. The nervous churning in your belly.
If you are doing this properly, your hands will get clammy, your heart rate will increase, and you might even get the urge to pee.
(This is just how AMAZING your brain is with visualization; your body doesn’t even know its an imagined experience.)
Now…
It’s time for you to respond.
Feel the discomfort, and then the response:
- You don’t give up when you miss a turn.
- You stick to your race strategy when a competitor takes off to an early lead.
- You tell yourself it’s okay to be in discomfort during the main set and keep at it.
- You stay calm and composed when a competitor talks smack behind the blocks.
- You feel your legs turning to cement but keep kicking like crazy.
- You tell yourself to stick to your process when you aren’t improving as fast as you’d like.
The applications for this tool are almost endless.
You can use this stuff for non-pool stuff too: not hitting the snooze button before early morning practice, choosing to make a healthy meal when you are exhausted at the end of the day, etc.
Visualize the spots in your life where there is resistance… and add a positive response to it.
Practice adversity
To sum up this strategy for kicking adversity in the butt, follow this three-step plan:
- Write out the moments of adversity you experience in the water.
- Visualize the adversity. Really feel it.
- Visualize yourself overcoming it or pushing through.
The point of practice and training is to prepare you for the pressure, rigors, and adversity of competition. Visualization is simply another weapon to prepare you.
Each night, run through your scenarios and build an inventory of reps, so that when adversity does strike (and you KNOW it will!), you will have a calming and confidence-boosting sensation of having “been there and done that.”
From there, confidence and fast swimming will flourish.
Mental Training for Swimmers Made Simple
Whether you are tired of choking on race day, want to finally conquer your mindset so that you can give your PB’s the beating they deserve, or you want to develop a killer game plan for your mindset, Conquer the Pool is your ticket to faster swimming.
“This is the best book I’ve ever seen concerning mental training.” — Ray Benecki, Head Coach, the FISH Swim Team
Used and trusted by some of the top clubs and swimmers on the planet and written with the feedback of 200+ head coaches, Olympians, former world record holders, and NCAA champions.