Globalization of our world is increasingly becoming the standard, so there is no wonder that efforts to raise bilingual children are nowadays close to being a norm (or they should be).

Did you know though that learning a second language as a child gives you an unprecedented advantage over the rest of the unilingual world?

You might say, "duh, I know one more language than everybody else", but this is not what I am talking about.

According to Princeton Neuroscientist Sam Wang, if you are bilingual from a very early age, your mind is more flexible and is able to quickly unlearn previously learned rules (resolve conflict cues).

Fascinating.

Too bad, my bilingualism is not from a very early age :(.

Bilingual swimming sign
Bilingual swimming sign

So how does this relate to swimming?

Well, quite a bit in my opinion.

While bilingualism focuses solely on your mind, swimming targets your body as well as your brain.

As you have heard me say many times, swimming blindly up and down the pool rarely gets you the results you desire, so proper swimming stroke is only achieved by employing your mind in conjunction with your body.

Unless you have learned to swim with the correct swimming technique at a very early age and let's face it the majority of us have not, you need to utilize your mind as well as your physical agility to re-learn or unlearn previously learned concepts.

Like bilingual children can be flexible in adapting previously learned concepts to reshape their way of thinking, you will need to unlearn the flaws in your swimming stroke that make you gasp for air at the end of the lap or that give you shoulder or neck pains.

There is no room for having an inflexible mind in efficient swimming.

You need to relate different body movements to different stroke analogies and constantly update your understanding of how your body behaves in the water.

Of course, this is just one side of the story.

The ability to actually perform the body movements highly depends on your physical ability which has nothing to do with the mind.

However, assuming you have no physical restrictions, without the mind involved in the process, you might spend years learning to swim and never be satisfied with the result since you are unable to cope with and understand the "conflicting" rules in swimming.

By conflicting rules, I refer to the many aspects of proper swimming you need to at the same time coordinate and think about when learning to swim.

Some of them being even counter-intuitive (such as breathing, head position, arm movement, kick, hip rotation, front arm position while breathing, etc. etc. etc.).

Your swimming styles should become shaped and re-shaped again and again with every swimming instructor or swimming resource you follow.

If your swimming program does a good job, you will break down the stroke into individual parts/drills and focus on mastering one of the parts first before moving onto the next.

Similar to learning a new language, first starting with the alphabet, numbers, simple words, short phrases, grammatical rules, sentences, etc. etc.

Without mastering the numbers, you cannot articulate the date or time.

Without mastering the proper head/body position and hip rotation, you cannot learn how to breathe easily and efficiently.

We all know that the mind is a powerful thing and our brains allow us to do quite amazing feats.

Apparently, if you are bilingual from early childhood, more power to you and congratulations, you are supercharged for success:).

I will leave you with this afterthought: please use your mind to help yourself succeed in swimming whatever your goals may be, watch swimming videos, read swimming tips articles, visualize, adapt, try different things, know how it feels to do it the wrong way, have fun and most of all never stop shaping and re-shaping your stroke.

Every stroke you take should have a meaning, be it relaxation or stroke improvement, otherwise, you are just wasting your time in your path to a perfect swimming stroke.  

Swim Advice Topics

Swimming, Bilingualism and Perfect Stroke is part of the following categories: Science and Technology, Goal Setting and Motivation, Misc

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