Some interesting analysis of New Year?s Resolutions from statisticbrain.com:
The Top 10 Resolutions for 2012 were:
- Lose Weight
- Get Organized
- Spend Less . . . Save More
- Enjoy Life More Fully
- Stay Fit and Healthy (not always the same thing)
- Learn Something Exciting
- Quit Smoking
- Help Others Reach Their Dreams
- Fall in Love
- Spend More Time with Family
And some revelatory statistics about who makes resolutions and their success rate:
- 62% of Americans make resolutions
- 38% never do.
- 8% of all resolutions made are achieved.
- 39% of 20-something resolvers report success, while ? ouch ? only 14% of 50+ resolvers do.
- However people who explicitly make a New Year?s Resolution are 10x more likely to achieve a goal than those who explicitly do not. (Huh?)
- Self-improvement or learning resolutions are the most frequently achieved. Relationship resolutions rank lowest in success.
Takeaways.
- It?s better to resolve than not.
- Resolving to improve yourself or learn something improves your odds.
- Those who are 50+ (I?ve never taken a poll, but suspect the median age of those who follow this blog is probably around 50) probably need a more examined, strategic approach.
So for my final blog of 2012, some suggestions for making?and achieving?2013 resolutions. Naturally my advice will focus on improving your swimming?which can not only contribute to #s 1-4-5-6 in the list above, but also aid any self-improvement project.
Small is beautiful. ??The keystone of the TI Method is Kaizen, the philosophy of Continuous Improvement. Kaizen is rooted in the Taoist proverb: ?The journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step.? Kaizen is explicitly about incremental change?often so subtle you can?t sense it, yet never doubt it?pursued daily.
- Some psychologists believe willpower is a limited resource: The more of it you require to make one change, the less you?ll have left over to make others. Or to sustain the first.
- Researchers Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer asked hundreds of resolvers to keep diaries. After reviewing their entries, they concluded: ?Small wins, achieved regularly, contribute much more to happiness than occasional ambitious accomplishments. The satisfaction produced by a greater achievement isn?t proportionately larger nor longer-lasting.?
- Ambitious goals often lead to procrastination, while small ones are less daunting.
Make modest resolutions, and renew them throughout the year, rather than set ambitious goals now.
Focus on process. This is a central precept in work by George Leonard on Mastery, Mihalyi Csikszentmihaly on Flow, Anders Ericsson and colleagues on Excellence and Daniel Coyle in The Talent Code. In the simplest of swimming terms, it means stop focusing on getting to the other end and focus instead on being conscious of each stroke along the way. Before long you?ll become aware of ?consequential nanoseconds? within each stroke.
Or if you?d like to improve your 1500m time by 10 percent?say from 30 to 27 minutes, do you understand how you ?construct? your current pace? Have you sought answers to questions like these?
- How do you pace your 1500 now ? how do the middle and final 500s compare to the first? If you slow down, why? Do you add strokes (lose Stroke Length) or lose tempo? What is the ideal way to ?construct? your goal time? What SPL and Tempo combination will produce your goal pace (per 100) . . . with the least effort?
- Is your SPL within the range of 2 to 3 counts that are appropriate for your height or wingspan?
- If your SPL is above that range, how much of that is due to poor balance and streamlining vs ineffective propulsion? Have you examined your stroke on video, or had it analyzed by a TI Coach?
- Are you practicing with a Tempo Trainer? Do you know your Tempo ?Sweet Spot? ? the tempo at which you can most easily maintain an SPL that?s efficient for your height? At what Stroke Rates do your ease and efficiency break down?both when you slow or increase tempo?
With this info, you can plan 100% personalized practices that target your primary improvement opportunities in your skill makeup and in combinations of SPL and Tempo.
Embrace the imperfect.
Don?t wait for any particular condition to be fulfilled or to feel strongly motivated. Emotional states, like motivation, are too often transitory. And the supposition that you require motivation undermines action. ?The belief that you need to feel motivated, or need the perfect situation, before taking action is the biggest barrier to actually getting things done.
Imperfection is indeed, the natural state of the Human Swimmer and means we have limitless Kaizen potential.
Japanese psychologist Shomo Morita writes: ?Begin taking action now, while being neurotic or imperfect or a procrastinator or unhealthy or lazy or any other label by which you inaccurately describe yourself.?
Be happier today.
New York Times health writer Jane Brody wrote in her article Changing our Tune on Exercise? ?For decades, [we?ve been] bombarded with messages that regular exercise is necessary to lose weight, prevent serious disease and foster healthy aging. And most people say they value these goals. Yet a vast majority of Americans ? two-thirds of whom are overweight or obese ? have thus far failed to swallow the ?exercise pill.? She described new research that says people are far more likely to exercise when they anticipate it will make today a better day, than for some possible future benefit.??People who exercise for quality of life exercise more over the course of a year than those who value exercise for its health benefits.???
I ride a bike for every feasible errand between April and November, neither to be green, nor to be fit. I do it because it makes me feel 15 again (I?m 61) and because, on a bike, I can feel a breeze on my face, smell the flowers and hear birdsong?none of which happens in a car. My swimming motivation is essentially the same. While I do swim in meets and and open water races?and am a very competitive person at heart?and I hope to be mobile, agile and graceful at 85?my main reason for swimming is I feel fantastic, physically and mentally, during and after.
Final Word
Any of these precepts could be resolutions themselves. Next week I?ll share my resolutions for 2012 and how they worked out, and those I?ve set for 2013 and how I?ve been guided by these precepts in setiing ? and re-setting ? them.
Until then, what will your swimming goals be for 2013? If you?d like to share, I?ve set up a special thread on the TI Discussion Forum. ?Look for ?What are your 2013 Swim Resolutions?? in the Links and References conference.
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Source: http://www.swimwellblog.com/archives/1830/
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