For years I had loved going in the sea, I loved the power of the waves and had had no fear of it at all. I never let not being a swimmer get in the way.
In Kerala in 2008, in the Arabian Sea, I was trying to bodysurf a wave which was breaking right on the beach. It caught me and dumped me down onto my shoulder from about 6 feet. I lay on the beach too scared to move in case I couldn't, the air smashed out of my lungs.
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You can make a total ass of yourself and the little people will still love you |
But an almost inaudible inner whisper told me different. And that nagging fear got bigger until it was strong enough not to have to lurk and hide itself.
(But I digress).
To recap and to fill you in on the events of 2 years: I worked, I fucked my back, I hung, I recovered, I went back to manual work and left the pool behind, I relapsed and was in constant pain again, I hung again for some months and recovered once more.
One day I asked at the lobby at the pool for one to one lessons (I thought 3 would be enough). They said I could book onto a 6 week adult beginners course- actually it was halfway through. When I turned up the following Sunday there was no one else there. So I got my 3 one to ones and it cost me £6.
I went to the pool in March 2011 and as well as hanging, I started to swim front crawl- I swam 25m and I thought I was going to die. The next day I swam 25m and I thought I was going to die. The next day I swam 25m and I thought I was going to die. Did I already say that? Anyway, whatever.
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The beautiful river Thames at Marlow on that fateful day |
I thought, I can do better than that, I can swim 1,000m, what's the worst thing that could happen?
I bought a wetsuit- I swam in a lake. Twice. When I got into Heron Lake my fear snapped sharply into focus. I knew I had to face it. This was the first step. It was thick, green, cold and I couldn't see through it. It had weeds in it and fuck knows what else was under there. Fish probably.
The big day came. I ate loads of french bread, brie and ham not long before the swim. I was so nervous I didn't know what else to do. I squeezed into my wetsuit and climbed into the water. Swam to the start and raced off with everyone else.
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My buddy Andy cheering me to the finish line. I feel like crying when I see this picture |
It was a pair of feet, but it did for me.
At Marlow you can run along the tow path with a swimmer and give them encouragement. My kids were there to witness me run out of steam, breath and energy after 100m. I looked upstream in dismay as almost every other swimmer disappeared into the distance. Ringing in my ears as I wobbled my wonky bad breaststroke way was, "come on dad, you can do it!"
I crawled for 5 minutes, sculled for 5 minutes, floundered for 3 minutes, all the time wishing my children weren't there to witness my humiliation. Andy finished 4th and I was 10th out of 15. A shade under 20 minutes.
My children were so proud. They didn't realise I had failed.
It felt like the worst day of my life. That night I booked a 1.5k. I was hooked.
Awesome :) xxxxx
ReplyDeleteI always wanted to swim like you
DeleteAww sweet.
ReplyDeleteIt's what it's all about isn't it?
Delete