Friday, August 8, 2008

Offski to the Med...

Yay! Today I leave for 6 weeks travelling round the Med, taking in the Electric Elephants inaugral festival.

I thought about what I'm looking forward to on the journey and it everything seemed to start with the letter P. See what you think....

- A bit of Peace and quiet in the first week in Tunisia and have some Proper downtime after finishing off work and leaving the hurly burly of London life.

- Persue my interests and re-fire up my Passions! Reading, visiting historic sites & museums, and tho its taken me hours and hours, I've downloaded a whole load of new music onto my Pod. Hurrah for the internet!

Recommends lately include:
The Resident Advisor Podcasts (each months mixes downloadable from http://www.residentadvisor.net/)
Charles Websters Defected mix
Martin Sorensens latest 12", Start Something on Tirk Records
Greg Wilsons re-edits of DC Le Groove / Gotta Tape I Wanna Play on Disco Deviance
And The Loft compilations on Nuphonic (oldie but a goodie).

- I'm looking forward to getting to Petrcane where the festival is being held, where I'll join up with friends for a week of Partying by and on the Adriatic.

Hopefully none of the above is too Pretentious and I Properly intend to write up some bits and Pieces whilst gone that I'll Post up when I get the chance for your Perusal!

Love to all.
S

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

University of North Texas Psychologist to Support U.S. Taekwondo Team





University of North Texas Psychologist to Support U.S. Taekwondo Team

From a UNT News Service press release

Many Americans only dream of attending an Olympic games in person.

But Karen Cogan, an assistant professor of psychology at UNT, has been invited to the Olympics three times to support U.S. athletes.

As a sport psychologist with the U.S. Olympic Taekwondo Team this year, Cogan will provide a listening ear and helpful advice to team members competing at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. She traveled with team members and their coaches to Beijing for an Olympic test event after attending a qualifying event to select the team members last year.

Cogan already has witnessed sport history made at two Winter Olympics – Salt Lake City in 2002 and Torino, Italy, in 2006. As a sport psychologist with the U.S. Freestyle Mogul Team, she helped to provide support to the coaches and athletes - including silver medalists Travis Mayer and Shannon Bahrke in 2002 and bronze medalist Toby Dawson in 2006.

"One of the administrators with the mogul team is now an administrator with the U.S. Olympic Training Center, and he recommended me to the team because I had done good work with the mogul team," Cogan says, adding that she accepted the job as sport psychologist in the 2008 Olympics even though she knew nothing about taekwondo, a Korean martial art and combat sport.

"I asked a lot of questions and learned the terminology. Just by watching, I picked up a lot of things," she says.

Taekwondo is famed for its use of kicking techniques, which distinguishes it from martial arts such as karate or southern styles of kung fu. Under Olympic rules, sparring takes place between two competitors in an area measuring 10 meters square. Each match or bout consists of three nonstop rounds of contact with rest between rounds. Points are awarded for permitted, accurate and powerful techniques to the legal scoring areas; light contact to a scoring area does not score any points.

Cogan says mental preparation and training for taekwondo athletes is, in some respects, very similar to that of other athletes, including the mogul skiers she's counseled.

"Personal issues and anxiety can get in the way of best performances. There's also pressure from well-meaning family members and friends who want to get tickets to competitions and have other requests, and the ability to handle media attention," she says.

Cogan works with athletes on:
  • relaxation
  • management of anxiety
  • positive thinking
  • goal setting
"I help them devise some sort of plan or routine leading into the competition that becomes more personal for each athlete," she says.

With the mogul team, Cogan helped competitors who were frustrated with lack of practice time on a course. She pointed out that the team had to make special arrangements before the competition season to go someplace where there is snow, and hope that there is enough snow for training.

"They're lucky if they get 40 days on the snow during the training camps in a year," she says.

Instead of worrying about training conditions, taekwondo athletes may feel anxiety over their opponents, having to anticipate the others' techniques, and over scoring. Unlike mogul skiing - in which athletes compete for the fastest speed down a 27-degree hill that is between 755 and 885 feet high - taekwondo is "a very subjective sport" for scoring, Cogan says.

"Even if you have one of the best fights of your life, you can still lose based on the scoring. And coaches have believed there has been some bias against the U.S. by judges in the past, so it's hard for an athlete or coach to stay focused when he or she doesn't believe a fair call has been made," she says. "The competitions are also single elimination, so if the judging isn't fair, the athlete doesn't have a second chance."

Cogan says her biggest challenge with the taekwondo team, which has not had a formal sport psychology program in the past, is building strong enough relationships with the coaches and athletes so that they feel comfortable to talk to her, but not be intrusive. She has already conducted several interventions with team members.

"I have provided them with a firm foundation of mental skills, and now we are down to maintenance as they go into the Olympics," she says.

UNT News Service press release
Nancy Kolsti can be reached at nkolsti@unt.edu.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The Art of Crawl

So I wrote a piece last week about how, once again, near I am to mastering the dark art of front crawl.
I’m still really enjoying the swimming lessons, my arm and leg technique has been applauded by my coach – we’re now even trying to implement in a slight rotation into my repertoire. However, my breathing is still letting me down. Maybe I’m thinking about it too much and need to get more Zen and properly focus and relax to make that full length of the pool.

Part of the reason for trying rotation was that I chanced upon an article in yesterdays Guardian advocating how to improve your front crawl – there’s a whole series on improving your swimming technique as apparently as a nation we’re doing it wrong and not reaping the benefits of our time in the pool! Sam Murphy, who usually gives great advice about running, wrote this article on front crawl and this superb one page PDF that offers a great starting point for anyone like me. In the article she also references a great website called ‘The Art of Swimming’ which shows these easy to follow tips on front crawl as well.

Hope these help you if you’re interested. If you can advise further on catching a bigger breath between strokes, I’d be keen to hear. I’m almost there, making a point of slowly breathing out underwater but still am gasping a bit/struggling to take in breath when I come up for air!

Friday, July 25, 2008

Energy at the North Pole?

After I'd mentioned that it was great that there looked to be a renewable solution to European and World energy needs , I listened in horror to Radio 4 last night about potential oil and gas prospecting that is shortly to be afoot at the North Pole.

According to the programme, as the ice pack there recedes, it opens up a passage to huge oil and gas reserves. There is somewhere in the region of 3 years worth of fuel to power all the Worlds current energy needs at the fingertips of whomever gets there. It sounds a lot but given the increasing usage of resources globally, that really isn’t that long despite the figures quoted in terms of billions of barrels. The Russians, as this article shows, planted their flag underwater last year to claim rights to the territory and thus the reserves; the Norwegians naturally lay claim to it and a number of other nations, the US included, are all scrabbling to do the same in time for when prospecting can get seriously underway.

Given current concerns about the ever decreasing amount of fossil fuels; the effect of those used so far by mankind and the potential catastrophe and difficulty in clearing up any large oil spill would cause in this part of the world, it seems to me and surely most sane thinking people, a barking idea to go an exploit yet more of our natural resources?

I think this statement from Pen Hadlow sums up my feelings and frustrations on the matter:"There is a terrible irony that the very thing that is driving climate change and the recession of the sea ice, the combustion of oil and natural gas and coal, is the very thing that they are looking to extract from the sea bed." If we can’t see that clearly now, whilst financial profit gets put before long term sustainability and the environmental damage caused, we’re narrower focused than I thought possible.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Desert energy?

I read this interesting story on a possible massive solar panel farm in the Sahara desert, almost the size of Wales that could power all of Europe’s energy needs in the future. Southern Spain & Portugal already provide their citizens above average levels of solar derived energy and this seems a great renewable way of powering the continent. This will be an interesting one to watch. The article goes on to propose a potential European HV super grid combining electric delivered over high voltage direct current so that different countries could export and trade energy more efficiently than the current AC system. Whether the political will to implement such a scheme would go beyond Sarkozy and Browns current tacit backing for the idea, we'll have to see.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Splish splash

So as well as running I now have been doing 4 weeks of swimming as part of my fitness regime. Partly vanity so I can look like I know what I'm doing with my front crawl but mainly because I love swimming and want to complete 25 or 30 lengths every week. My friend Catherine has been putting me through my paces in our local lido. At first I was very nervous about the technique I was trying to recall from 20 years previous. But we've ironed out the creases and I've learnt a more efficient way to cut through the water, elbows raised first out of the water and index finger plunging in using my hands almost like a flipper!

Week by week I can see and feel the improvement but I'm let down by one thing, and that’s my breathing. I'm tending to find I can do half a length of the pool but then I'm not taking in enough oxygen on my breaths when I turn my head. Otherwise I'm fine, and can feel it all come together so that my strokes happen naturally, like all the different processes you need to take on board when learning to drive. I just need to get the co-ordination of breathing right then I can gracefully go up and down and the lido like a (semi) pro!

Most importantly I'm enjoying going each week and feeling myself improve bit by bit. I can't wait for the moment I complete a full length using all the skills I've been working at, but then I believe that’s the point of learning and setting goals to help you improve at whatever you turn your hand to. Trying to learn a new (or forgotten) skill regardless of whether you get it correct each time.

Sometimes you luck out in life but mainly I find skills wise you improve by hitting various breakthrough moments, then putting all the different skills you’ve learned together. The most frustrating thing about this endeavour is that I am re-learning something that I used to take for granted as a kid! If only I could tap into that part of my brain and do it automatically!

Monday, July 14, 2008

Up, up and away!

So today marks the last full day my dear folks will be living in the UK. They've sold up and bought a place in the sun and opted to retire to Alicante in Southern Spain. Luckily for them they've negated the credit crunch and sold their house here as seemingly the amount of buyers drys up.

The removal men have come and are taking away all the bits and pieces from their combined 62 years of living and moving it to mainland Europe. Its no different time wise to get there than it does currently in the UK but this move does feel different. Me and my bro are left on the island whilst they'll be on the big land mass, learning a new language, way of life and culture. I did feel a bit sorry for myself but I can't blather on, as a friend pointed out, some folk don't have their parents around to spend time with. And we get the benefit of trekking to the sun to enjoy their company!

So best foot forward, good luck to them and a big pat on the back for having the courage to go and do something new and adventurous! I guess its weird to think its them moving and not us. But they'll survive and I look forward to going over, seeing them, running in the lovely surroundings such as San Juan Beach and catching up in the not too distant future.