Throughout my life, I’ve never once dove into a pool with the mindset of breaking records.
If that’s something I choose to focus on, my priorities are not straight.
In my first two seasons swimming for Nebraska, I’ve had the honor of breaking multiple school records.
But make no mistake, that’s not what motivates me.
Seeing my name as a school record holder is nice, but records are made to be broken, right? As time passes, my legacy at Nebraska won’t be based on how many records I did and didn’t break.
My legacy will be defined by how I gave everything I had every time I put on that Husker swim cap.
It sounds so simple, but before every meet, I’m focused on swimming faster than I’ve ever swam before and reaching personal bests.
If it just so happens I earn a school record while scoring a personal best, that’s wonderful and I’ll be elated about that.
But in sport where our success is measured by time, I’ve learned not to obsess over my times because while they can be a fantastic motivator, they can also be a destructive roadblock.
Even the best swimmers in the world have bad days and off meets, so going back to high school, I’ve always prided myself in putting in the work and trusting my coaches no matter what my times showed.
I always believed if I did that, on my best and worst day, my swim career would take me where I wanted it to be.
Gena's record breaking swim places 5th at Big Tens! 👑 pic.twitter.com/BASYpB2evP
— Nebraska Swimming and Diving (@HuskerSwimNDive) February 24, 2024