Subject: RE: How to learn how to exhale under water?Breathe in relation to your level of exertion. If you are just gliding across the pool, you should be taking very easy, short breaths. Think about how you breathe during a brisk walk. How many breaths do you take per minute? How deeply are you breathing? Also, do you breathe in through your mouth and out your nose while walking? Probably not (naturally anyway ), so there's no reason to do it while swimming.
When I'm walking, I breath as often as I can or want to. I don't take 3 steps and then breathe. I also don't just breathe out through my nose. Likewise, when swimming, I breathe as often as I can (1 breath per stroke cycle ). I breathe in through my mouth and I breathe out through my nose and mouth. I find it much less restrictive than trying to breathe out through my nose.
Breathing while in the water should mimic breathing on land as closely as possible with the exception of timing your inhales with your roll to your breathing side.
It's all about exchanging gases, out with the bad, in with the good. There is no holding breath, not even for a second. Breathe in or out, no in-between!  Pay close attention to this, you may be holding your breath for a split second somewhere, 1/2 way through your stroke, right after you take a breath, somewhere. Be on the lookout for this. |