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Encyclopedia > Total Immersion

Total Immersion is a new approach to the hydrodynamics of the human body when swimming. Its chief proponent is American swimming coach, Terry Laughlin. The aim is to swim like a fish, undulating/oscillating the whole body, rather than propelling only with the arms and legs. Swimming is a technique that humans, and other animals, use to move through water using only movements of the body. ...

Contents

Principles

Total Immersion claims to be a new way of swimming, to make the rewards of swimming well available to everyone, not just to elites, and to emphasize the pursuit of pleasure – feeling good in the water and enjoying it intellectually and emotionally – as the surest way to improve skill, endurance and even speed.


Though swimming is an essential life skill, and acknowledged as among the healthiest of all activities, few people have the skill necessary to enjoy its full rewards. This is so because humans, being land animals, are “hard-wired” to swim inefficiently and this instinctive inefficiency is reinforced by traditional instruction and coaching.


Although few people do swimming as a sport, the paradigms of competitive swimmers and coaches have been highly influential in how recreational or fitness swimmers develop their swimming, leading to a focus on power and conditioning. This makes as little sense as if cyclists who ride mainly for transportation, fitness or pleasure tried to copy Lance Armstrong’s workouts.


According to Terry Laughlin, the primary impediment to swimming better is neither fitness nor power (otherwise marathon runners could all swim great distances and weight lifters would set records in the pool), but the unique problems presented by the medium of water to a human body traveling through it. Water offers poor support, poor traction and is 880 times denser than air. Thus an emphasis on pulling, kicking and conditioning will lead to frustration and stagnation for most people.


The Total Immersion way is to focus on four essential skills:

  • (1) balance – because that turns swimming from survival into a skill;
  • (2) active streamlining – because reducing drag will always yield greater benefits than trying to increase power;
  • (3) rhythmic weight shifts – because the combination of gravity and mass is a virtually effortless source of power; and
  • (4) traction – because water is so elusive that it’s easier to “hold onto your place in the water” (then use weight shifts to move past your grip) than to push yourself forward.

Because these four skills that make humans more efficient in the water are non-instinctive and counter-intuitive, Total Immersion swimmers focus on swimming as a mindful practice done in the spirit of yoga or tai chi, rather than the endurance-and-power-focused workouts done by competitive swimmers. The aim is to become more self-aware and to feel at “one with the water.” Lap counts and pace times are considered far less important than economy, grace, attention and awareness.


Details

The technique for front crawl: Swimmer breathing during front crawl Front crawl is the fastest swimming style known. ...

  • The body should be as streamlined as possible, maximising length, and minimising frontal area. Body length is maximised by keeping the leading arm extended for as long as possible - each recovering arm almost catches up with the arm about to start the next pull.
  • Because the head is dense and the lungs are buoyant, the alignment of the head and chest is all important in reducing drag and improving speed. Most of the head should be kept under the surface all of the time.
  • Body rotation is emphasised, so that the turning of the torso adds to the propulsive effect of the arms.
  • Emphasis is placed on developing balance and awareness of the dynamics of swimming, over and above the development of simple strength and power.

For butterfly and breaststroke the body undulates up and down, so that the movement of the torso contributes to the power of the kick. The butterfly, (fly for short) is a swimming stroke swum on the breast, with both arms moving simultaneously. ... Part of the breaststroke. ...


Debate

The approach has critics, who oppose what they see as a movement away from the essential primacy of cultivating strength and endurance.


These critics maintain that Total Immersion is most suited to beginning or fitness swimmers, who need a style which emphasizes technique over fitness, or older swimmers. The emphasis on balance and streamlining removes the need for a strong leg kick (so often needed to prevent the feet from sinking) and directs more of the force from the kick to forward propulsion. The stroke is thus less tiring, and can be sustained for long distances. Adult amateur triathletes use Total Immersion methods, so that they can conserve their legs for the cycling and running stages of a competition. A triathlon is an athletic event made up of three contests (from the Greek). ... This road bicycle is built using lightweight, shaped aluminium tubing and carbon fiber stays and forks. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...


Swimmers who have been training competitively since their pre-teen years may not benefit from Total Immersion techniques. These experts may have "outgrown" the Total Immersion training concepts, because their stroke style is already ingrained and automatic. To swim faster, they focus more on stroke speed and intensity of interval workouts. Detractors believe Total Immersion techniques alone won't enable swimmers to progress to top-level competition standards.


Terry Laughlin replies to these criticisms by noting that any human body is subject to the same unyielding physical forces in water and that the faster that body is moving, the more resistance the water provides, with resistance sometimes increasing as a square of speed. While the ability to increase power or fitness is finite, the opportunity to improve one’s economy is almost limitless, because the mechanical efficiency of even elite swimmers is only about 10 percent.


External links

  • Total Immersion website

References

  • Laughlin, Terry (2001). Swimming Made Easy: The Total Immersion Way for Any Swimmer to Achieve Fluency, Ease, and Speed in Any Stroke. Total Immersion Inc. ISBN 1-931009-01-5.
Styles of Swimming
Competitive: Backstroke | Breaststroke | Butterfly | Freestyle | Medley
Competitive Variations: Front crawl | Total Immersion | Trudgen
Recreational: Sidestroke | Snorkeling
Other: Dog paddle | Treading water

  Results from FactBites:
 
Total Immersion now available in South Africa (150 words)
Total Immersion is the world leader in providing hands-on instruction as well as self-coaching tools for swimmers of all ages and abilities.
Since 1988 the Total Immersion technique has been taught to thousands of adults and children who have learned to swim better, faster, and easier and enjoy it more.
Total Immersion teaches you to swim with Fishlike flow through a thoughtfully choreographed sequence of drills that retrain your nervous system to make you swim better, faster and easier.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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