My
fairly newly developed extended stroke is coming into its own and I am fairly
powering my way down the pool. My new
technique is to break my traditional rhythm of breathing on my left arm stroke
by adding three extra strokes before the breath. This means that my head is down for longer
and the speed is increased with very little extra effort. The breathing, retaining the breath until
after the second left arm stroke and then exhaling the breath over the next
three strokes until the next breath, is still something for which I am
counting. Eventually it will become
second nature and I can begin to think about whether I really ought to find
someone to teach me the tumble turn.
The
fluency of my swimming is obviously interrupted by the fact that I touch the
end of the lane and turn myself round and then set off again. This is hardly efficient, but I have made
little effort to develop anything more sophisticated. There is a gentleman of, shall we say, late
middle age who does the most inefficiently cumbersomely magnificent tumble
turns that my clumsy turns seem polished professionalism by contrast! However, he is at least making an effort and
I still hesitate to humiliate myself by turning and finding my feet are nowhere
near the wall of the pool. This I have
already done on various occasions when the spirit moves me to assume a higher
professional profile and got a mouthful of water as an added bonus for my
effort as well. Perhaps I could leave
that as a task for the summer. And for a
teacher.
Perhaps
I could ask one of the lifeguards to give me a few hints, though trying to
understand Spanish or Catalan for such a technical effort might be effort that
I am not prepared to make.
I
am prepared to put the effort in for the Magnum Opus Poeticus. More work was done on this today, though most
of it, nay all of it was more in the way of preparation than anything
else. I am getting nearer to what the
poems (I have decided on a sequence of seven) should contain, but that need
polishing and then the real hard work of getting the content starts.
At
the moment I am beset by cliché and all my original ideas seem more tired the
more I think about them. The process of
refinement should produce something of more interest and I am keeping my powder
dry to get me through the Day School which looms.
Diane,
who has been with me through three OU courses, now, seems prepared to make
arrangements of our evening meals for the two nights that we are likely to be
in Geneva. God bless her!
It
will be illuminating to meet my fellow students. The last time I met students on OU courses
was in the eighties, and in Britain. I
wonder how the present crop of students will be different. Or indeed be the same. Instructive is the word that comes to mind.
I
will have to pack tomorrow, as I have to be at the airport by 10 in the morning
for a half past twelve flight. I will
also have to print out some maps and information about Geneva. Not that I will have much time for
sightseeing.