Llanelli Star

I swim just to switch off now – not to exercise

OLYMPIAN BECKY ADLINGTON TELLS LISA SALMON HER NEW MISSION IS TO GET CHILDREN IN THE WATER AS BABIES

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LIGHTNINGFAST swims are just a fantastic memory now for multiple Olympic, World, Commonweal­th and European medallist Becky Adlington.

These days, she likes nothing better than to swim at “plod” speed up and down at her local pool.

“I go swimming to switch off. I don’t go fast, I literally plod up and down,” says the mum-of-two.

“I only swim for 30-40 minutes, and I don’t use it as my exercise. I just go to switch off and think – it’s almost like my meditation, my yoga. I use it more for my mental health than I do physical.”

She laughs when asked if she ever has the urge to go fast.

“None at all, it’s so bizarre,” Becky, 33, admits. “All my swimming friends – who’ve all retired, like me – say the same. None of us want to go hell for leather, it’s just a nice switch-off.

“Our bodies are so conditione­d to swimming, I don’t even think about it. When you get in your car, you don’t think about how to drive, you just do it, and that’s exactly how I feel about swimming – I just get in – and that’s what I love.”

Her life still revolves around the sport however, as she runs the massively successful Becky Adlington’s SwimStars programme, which teaches children to swim with an emphasis on fun – ‘The Becky Way’.

There’s also BabyStars, for babies and youngsters aged up to three years.

Becky says her mission is for every child to be able to swim 25 metres by the time they leave primary school, and she’s certainly on the road to achieving that – she says SwimStars alone teaches 14,000 children every week at multiple venues across the country.

“I much prefer this grassroots level,” she shares. “A lot of people who retire from swimming go into the more elite side or coaching, but I so wanted to do the grassroots side, and I absolutely love it. It’s so rewarding with the children, seeing them having fun and gaining confidence,” she adds.

“At the end of the day, that’s why I fell in love with the sport – I fell in love with it when I was a kid, playing mermaids and jumping in in my pyjamas, so it totally takes me back to why I love the sport and why I got into it in the first place.”

Becky’s own children – Summer, seven, and Albie, 16 months – have weekly lessons too.

“Summer does enjoy swimming, but don’t get me wrong, she’s not the best I’ve ever seen, bless her! But she doesn’t need to be and I don’t care – as long as she’s safe in water,” says the sporty mum.

“She loves the water. When we go on holiday, she’s always in the pool and she’s a little fish in that way, definitely a water baby. But she’s not very competitiv­e, she’s more creative, which is absolutely fine – I’m just happy she enjoys it. Albie absolutely loves his lessons too – he just splashes for half an hour, going crazy.”

Becky stresses that you can’t be too young to start swimming – Summer was three weeks old when she first took her, and Albie was five weeks old.

“The earlier the better.” says Becky. “It’s about confidence – they start developing fear from about three to five years, and they become fearful of the water. But if they’ve been in the water before then, they don’t have as much fear and it’s easier to get them in. “One of the biggest barriers is confidence, it’s not actually children’s ability to swim – everyone has that ability, whether they’re three or 93 – but so many people are so scared to get in the water that it takes them weeks and weeks of coming [to the pool] just to get them to put their little toe in the water.

“It’s breaking down that fear, the earlier the better.”

Several drownings in open water during the recent heatwave have brought the importance of being a strong swimmer into sharp focus. Becky stresses: “It’s getting people to understand there are dangers from water year-round, and unfortunat­ely it’s not one of those sports you can learn in two weeks and then you’ll be fine for your holiday. You need a good couple of months to get children confident, happy and safe in water.

“I don’t think people really see swimming as a life skill, they see it as a great Olympic sport and love to watch it, but they don’t really see that life skill part. It’s about changing that attitude.”

And helping change attitudes towards swimming means Becky’s lessons programme is now her fulltime job. She shares child-caring duties with her husband Andy Parsons – Albie’s dad (Becky had Summer with

I fell in love with the sport as a kid – playing mermaids and jumping in in pyjamas

her first husband, Harry Needs), and makes time for gym visits too.

“I do classes two or three times a week for 45 minutes, so they’re perfect – I’ve done my bit, been healthy, and on I go with the rest of my day,” she says. “It doesn’t take up too much time – I don’t have the time to go to the gym more.”

Becky says they try to eat healthily as a family too: “I wouldn’t say we’re super-healthy – if we’re out and about, we’ll have an ice cream with the kids, so we definitely indulge when it’s nice to. “But at the same time, we’re not having takeaways and we love to cook, so we’ll make meals from scratch.

“We’re just a normal family with our food,” Becky reflects. “I class it as everything in moderation and balance.”

 ?? ?? IN THE SWIM: Becky first took Albie to the pool when he was five weeks old
IN THE SWIM: Becky first took Albie to the pool when he was five weeks old
 ?? ?? Becky with Albie and Summer
Becky with Albie and Summer
 ?? ?? Celebratin­g a gold medal
Celebratin­g a gold medal

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