Subject: RE: Learning Bilateral BreathingDoing pull sets with a pullbuoy or fins--the extra buoyancy seems to make it easier to breathe on the don-dominant side, and the buoy allows you to concentrate more on rotation and breathing without having to put it all together yet. Also, there's a drill (we call it 6-beat-breathe) where you extend one arm and leave the other by your side. Take six kicks, then breathe to the side of the non-extended arm, take a stroke, then switch sides. Follow this with some actual swimming where you try to breathe bilaterally. That being said, I really mastered bilateral breathing when I messed up my elbow last fall and couldn't fully extend it without a lot of discomfort for several weeks. I was allowed to swim as long as I didn't do anything that hurt, as the drs. could never quite decide if I had a hairline fracture or just messed-up ligaments. You can't really breathe without normal extension on the opposite arm (it throws rhythm totally off), so I was able to do freestyle only breathing on my non-dominant side, with fins. After about two months of that, once I was able to swim normally again, I forced myself to do bilateral breathing instead of breathing only to the right, so as not to overload the injury, and it now seems totally natural. (Before I had always breathed to the right with a 2-2-4 pattern; swam competitively as a kid and teen with it.) Short of breaking your arm, maybe one-arm swim drills could mimic this effect? |