macroth wrote:That's not an answer. You say "I row", I say "how much", you say "I should be able to train myself to". Why use the present tense for things you aren't actually doing presently and only hope, maybeifwhen, to achieve?
Because that's how training goes--at every stage.
It is future-oriented.
When you start working at some level, it is difficult to do.
Then as you keep doing it, day in and day out, it gets easier, and you improve.
Soon, you are hitting your targets.
Then you go on to the next level.
When you first do rowing at that next level, it is difficult to do.
Then as you keep doing it, day in and day out, it gets easier, and you improve.
Soon, you are hitting your targets.
Then you go on to the next level.
When you first do rowing at that next level, it is difficult to do.
Then as you keep doing it, day in and day out, it gets easier, and you improve.
Soon, you are hitting your targets.
Then you go on to the next level.
When you first do rowing at that next level, it is difficult to do.
Then as you keep doing it, day in and day out, it gets easier, and you improve.
Soon, you are hitting your targets.
Then you go on to the next level.
When you first do rowing at that next level, it is difficult to do.
Then as you keep doing it, day in and day out, it gets easier, and you improve.
Soon, you are hitting your targets.
Then you go on to the next level.
When you first do rowing at that next level, it is difficult to do.
Then...
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)