Responding to less than ideal circumstances

photo of an athlete swimming underwater

Today when I was in the pool, another person came into my lane. Now, normally I have zero problem with this, as long as the person can observe simple rules, sticking to the right side of the lane, and giving way to the faster swimmer, then there shouldn't be a problem. But when people break this rule, i.e. by not timing the swim so that the faster swimmer has to wait for the slower swimmer to make a turn before they can even have a chance at overtaking them, then we have a problem. And that's what happened today.

Granted, the person would have seen me warming up, when I was swimming relatively slowly, but after the first time I overtook them, they probably should have either changed lanes, or rethought their timing. They didn't, and I ended up having to stop in the middle of the lane more than once (which is strictly not allowed by the way, but I had no choice). So my times got messed up a bit, but instead of stopping and complaining, I sucked it up and thought about during triathlons when this sort of thing is a given, and I gave myself a challenge of still beating the set time, which I was able to do.

If that person hadn't gotten into my lane, I wouldn't have known how to act when I was all flustered, so I think of this as a good opportunity to see how well I could respond to less than ideal circumstances.

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

adult man in brown and white striped button up shirt raising his hand
Is it prioritising yourself
pexels-photo-10573462.jpeg
Why Japanese people always reverse into the car park
Are you serious about that?

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

I deleted Twitter and Instagram
black claw hammer on brown wooden plank
The tweaking never stops
Losing your culture, or sharing it

RANDOM POSTS

a statue of a man near the clouds
Use this Stoic philosophy on a micro scale to get things done
body of water during golden hour
Ripples and Waves
photo of people using laptop
Attachment in work
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top