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320 pages, Paperback
First published April 14, 2020
Swimming is the second most popular recreational activity in America, outranked only by walking.
The body is engaged in full physical movement, but the mind itself floats, untethered.
We skip from thought to thought, and then there's a momentary nothingness. In that brief interlude, we are entirely liberated from the weight of thinking.
When we swim today, writes [Damon] Young, that euphoria "comes from the passions of survival, without the desperate need to survive."
[Lynne Cox] equates being in the ocean "with an acute awareness of your life in the moment." Being in the pool, going back and forth, is not the same. "Being in the ocean," Cox tells me, "you could become part of the food chain any moment."
[To Tsui] that's the sublime: the awe and the terror, together. Those moments of panic, the electric flashes of fear, are elucidating, exhilarating.