Learning to Prepare for Success
From News for Swim Parents
Published by The American Swimming Coaches Association
5101 NW 21 Ave., Suite 200
Fort Lauderdale FL 33309
By John Leonard
Executive Director
The American Swimming Coaches Association
As I write this in late December in Fort Lauderdale, the air temperature
is a “balmy” 42 degrees….well, balmy if you’re from Green Bay,
Wisconsin, maybe. Here in South Florida, that’s a cold wave. We swim
outside, and the water temperature is 75 degrees as the heaters can’t
keep up when the air is this cold. The wind-chill factor, according to
Channel 7, is…well, we don’t want to know the wind-chill with a nice
brisk 20 mile an hour wind coming off the Everglades.
My phone rings at 5 AM and a small voice on the other end asks
plaintively, “do we really have swim practice, Coach John?” Yes,
we really do.
“WHY?” Is the next question, which I wrestle with myself on the 15
minute drive to the pool…. Why put teenagers in the water on this cold
and nasty morning when both they and I would prefer to stay
snuggled in at home for another hour or hour and a half?
Now, I KNOW why, but can I express it to my swimmers? Yes, I’ll try.
Everyone, on the day after the high school state meet, vows that “next
year” they will A) make a final, B) Make the meet C) win an event or D)
write in your own goal here.
It’s easy to vow to do something the day after, when you are excited,
full of the promise of life and get up and go. It’s a lot harder
to REMEMBER what you wanted to do a couple months ago when it’s 5 AM and
cold outside. Then it’s a lot harder and a lot easier to rationalize,
“it’s just one workout.”
The problem is, when teenagers begin to learn to rationalize, they get
really good at it really fast, and pretty soon, the ACTION required to
fulfill the commitments to those goals, falls prey to the
rationalization. And after you rationalize the decision you want to make
the first time, it’s so much easier to do it the next time, and the time
after that, and pretty soon, the goal is just a dream, because you’re
rationalized yourself into thinking “I’d like to do that if everything
could be perfect for me, and it would never be cold in the morning, or
no social events would ever conflict with practice, and time with
my friends always went the way I want it to. “
But things never go perfectly. The ONLY thing you can successfully
predict is that obstacles to your goal WILL come up, and little or
nothing will go smoothly. And that consistency in preparation is the
only way to raise the percentages of the chance you will reach your
goal.
Read that again… ”raise the percentages of the chance…” Not a
guarantee. If it’s a good goal, there are no guarantees, EXCEPT that if
you don’t prepare correctly, according to the plan, you won’t raise your
chance of success, you’ll lower it.
So why go to practice at 5 AM in the cold? Because its part of the plan,
and it raises your chance of success. But most of all, because you have
told yourself that you will commit to doing it. And if you let yourself
down, who won’t you let down? Prepare for a chance for success.
And feel really good about doing that.
Because not very many people do.
All the Best, JL





