http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/05/13/swimming-good-for-body-but-important-to-change-strokes-most-prefer-the-breaststroke/
Swimming good for body but important to change strokes – Most prefer the 
breaststroke 


BERLIN: Most people learn how to swim as children, often in formal lessons 
ending with the issuance of a swimming certificate. As adults they jump pretty 
fearlessly into swimming pools and lakes. A lot of them swim incorrectly, 
however, putting undue strain on their body. “The big advantage of swimming is 
that it negates the force of gravity somewhat,” remarked Herbert Loellgen, 
president of the German Society for Sports Medicine and Prevention. “It 
therefore puts less strain on the joints compared with sports like jogging or 
tennis.” What is more, Loellgen said, swimming strengthens the cardiovascular 
system-particularly if you swim at least a few hundred metres at a stretch-and 
breathing deliberately while swimming can have a calming effect on the psyche.

Many adults are aware of the benefits and regularly swim laps in indoor and 
outdoor pools. Most prefer the breaststroke. “It’s the most common stroke in 
Germany because it’s the first one we learn,” noted Andreas Bieder, a swimming 
expert at the German Sport University in Cologne. “But you often see people 
swimming it in an extremely vertical position”-like a duck, in other words, 
with the head always above water and the buttocks being pulled toward the 
water’s surface. “As a result, the neck is bent far backwards and the back of 
the cervical vertebrae (located in the neck) are strongly compressed, which 
strains them” and can cause tension, Bieder said. “Many people’s cervical 
vertebrae are already strained due to office and desk work, so it’s not good if 
they’re overstrained during swimming, too.”

So it is better to regularly submerge the head when performing the 
breaststroke, Bieder advised. “You inhale above water and exhale underwater. 
The vertebrae are bent when you inhale, but extended when you exhale” – which 
relieves them considerably, he said. But as Beate Ludewig, an instructor for 
the German Swimming Federation, pointed out: “A lot of people are afraid to put 
their head underwater.” One reason is that they have been swimming for years 
with their head above water, and another is that “it’s a human instinct not to 
go underwater.” These people can accustom themselves to submersion, though, for 
example in special adult courses, said Ludewig, or they can try to do it on 
their own. “You can practice at home in the bathtub by putting your face 
underwater – at first briefly and then for longer,” she said.

Another option is to work on submersion straightaway in a pool. “You should 
practice at the pool’s edge and get used to the feeling of your head going 
underwater,” Ludewig advised. Once the person feels more confident exhaling 
underwater, he or she should practice swimming with the head moving into and 
out of the water. “You’ve got to take your time and practice gradually,” she 
said.
According to Ludewig, it typically takes about 10 hours of practice to become 
comfortable with head submersion. “And if it takes someone 20 hours, it doesn’t 
matter,” she said. “In any case, you shouldn’t be ashamed if you’re fearful.”

Many people believe the backstroke is better for the back. “This hasn’t been 
scientifically proven but seems plausible” because the head is supported by the 
water so the neck muscles are not tensed, Bieder said. “It’s important to be 
truly relaxed, however, and not constantly worry about water sloshing across 
your face,” otherwise there’s a risk of tenseness. The front crawl is a bit 
different. “Here, too, you also exhale underwater and inhale above water, which 
takes a load off the spine,” Loellgen said. But there are disadvantages. Crawl 
swimmers are not suffered gladly in crowded pools lacking a designated lane for 
them. And a lot of people find this swimming stroke’s combination of arm and 
leg movements, and inhaling and exhaling, difficult to master. Loellgen offered 
the following tip: “It’s good to regularly change the stroke; that way you 
don’t overstrain any part of the body.” – dpa


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