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CHAPTER 1 - GETTING INTO THE FAST LANE, ONE MORE TIME
In the world inhabited by competitive swimmers, I’ve been considered old for a long time. The first time I really felt this was when I decided to make a comeback for the 2000 Olympic team. I was thirty-two years old, and some people, including my beloved dad, thought I was crazy. He still believed in me, though, as did many other supporters, but the most important factor was that I believed in me. I made the team, went to Sydney with my fellow Americans, and won five medals—two gold and three bronze. But who’s counting?
That experience was the first time I was forced to relearn how to both push my body and respect it. It was a turning point in my career, and I had to dig deep inside of myself, rethink how to train my body, and ask new questions about what makes a person stronger and more flexible—in body and in mind. In other words, I had to understand how not to let my age get in my way.
I’ve always had my own sense of time, and in most ways it’s worked for me. Most swimmers will tell you that at one point they simply decide to hang up their suit. I’ve had moments like that, too, but I’ve reversed my decision now a total of three times. The last such time was when I was thirty-eight and finally, miraculously, got pregnant after years of trying. I jumped back into the pool simply to get some exercise and get rid of morning sickness during my pregnancy, believing that a strong body would only help to make my baby stronger. Being in the pool again felt so right that I was encouraged to begin yet another new training regimen. And two years after my daughter,
Tessa, was born, I found myself, at the age of forty-one, in Beijing at my fifth Olympic Games.
As the title of my memoir, Age Is Just a Number, indicates, I like to challenge the odds. I believe that most of us can not only reach beyond our own preconceived limitations but also rise to challenges much bigger than we allow ourselves to dream . . . if we simply believe in ourselves. I know that’s a big if. How do you gain that trust in yourself? By setting up real, measurable goals and developing realistic expectations and plans to meet those goals. Then, of course, there’s follow-through. Don’t expect to lose those last five or ten pounds if you’re not consistent with your workouts. Don’t expect to run that 5k if you haven’t been running 3 miles three or four times a week. Don’t expect to finish that book you’ve always wanted to write if you don’t sit down at the computer several times a week. Results demand showing up. However, it’s also true that when you do show up and put in the work, you might just exceed your own expectations.
So, when I put on my Speedo and my old goggles again, I knew that as a thirty-nine-year-old new mom I had to train differently. I couldn’t expect that my body was the same as it was in Sydney six years earlier, or in Barcelona eight years before that. Once I understood this, I learned three very important lessons: (1) I needed to develop more flexibility so that my muscles and joints were more balanced and supported one another; (2) I had to strengthen my body in a new way (lean and long rather than bulky and beefy); and (3) most important of all, I had to recognize the importance of recovery for my mind and body. These three elements combined to make me a faster, stronger, and smarter swimmer. Rest and recovery time, functional strength training, and resistance stretching have been my mantra, my secret weapons, and the key not only to competing as a forty-something athlete but also to feeling amazingly confident and comfortable in my body. And they can be yours as well—just wait and see.
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Overview
Dara Torres has been to the Olympics five times, she's won twelve medals, and now, at the age of 42, she still competes with girls half her age and is one of the most celebrated swimmers of all time. But you don't need to list her accolades to understand why people admire her athleticism so much—just look at her! Perfect abs, enviable arms—she's as strong as can be and continues to redefine established wisdom about staying in shape at any age. So, what's her secret?In Gold Medal Fitness you'll find all of Torres's tips for getting back into the game and staying in shape for many years to come. Her unique combination of stretching and ...