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Swim
Swim: Why We Love the Water | Lynn Sherr
3 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
Swim is a celebration of swimming and the effect it has on our lives. It's an inquiry into why we swim--the lure, the hold, the timeless magic of being in the water. It's a look at how swimming has changed over the millennia, how this ancient activity is becoming more social than solitary today. It's about our relationship with the water, with our fishy forebearers, and with the costumes that we wear. You'll even find a few songs to sing when you push out those next laps. Swimming enthusiast Lynn Sherr explores every aspect of the sport, from the biology of swimming to the fame of Esther Williams; from turquoise pools and wild water to the training of Olympians; and she reveals the secret of buoyancy so that anyone can avoid the example of the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, who lamented, "Why can't I swim, it seems so very easy?" When his friend, the biographer Edward John Trelawny, said, "because you think you can't," Shelley plunged into Italy's Arno River and dropped like a rock. With Swim, you can avoid that happening to you.
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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1. Cardio but I need to factor in strength and flexibility more
2. Inside
3. No music #unpopularopinion
4. Swimming laps - very meditative and no sweating
5. Pool doesn‘t equal playlists. I like the sound of the water.
https://youtu.be/H-aLtj0WDXM

#HelloThursday @wanderinglynn

wanderinglynn Thanks for playing! 🙌🏻 5y
KathyWheeler I want a waterproof iPod or something that I can listen to audiobooks or music while I swim, but then I‘d be afraid that I‘d lose track of my laps. 5y
See All 18 Comments
BarbaraTheBibliophage @KathyWheeler I know what you mean. My watch tracks my laps, so that part isn‘t an issue. I see a couple of folks moving coins on the pool deck to count their laps. 5y
KathyWheeler @BarbaraTheBibliophage Do you have to hit a button on your watch when you turn? 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @KathyWheeler Nope. Apple Watches just sense when you change direction. Plus I tell it how many yards long the pool is. 5y
saguarosally I‘m with you on 3, I like silence! 5y
KathyWheeler @BarbaraTheBibliophage I‘ve always said I didn‘t want an Apple Watch; I might change my mind. 5y
SaturnDoo @KathyWheeler samsung watches have the same features as the apple watches. 😊 I've been thinking about buying one as I would rather exercise in water. 5y
Sharpeipup I want to swim more. 5y
KathyWheeler @SaturnDoo I‘ll have to compare. 5y
GlassAsDiamonds You can get Bluetooth headphones that are waterproof if you wanted to try that - the husband has some. You preload them with music, audio books/ whatever, they don‘t need a phone nearby. 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @KathyWheeler Chexk out ⬆️ from @GlassAsDiamonds. I actually like the pool noises rather than having ear pods. 5y
KathyWheeler @BarbaraTheBibliophage I used to as well but very recently I‘ve found that one of my ears is bothered by the water even though it‘s covered by my cap and I‘ve had to start wearing earplugs. 😞 I figure if I‘m wearing those, I might as well be listening to something. (edited) 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @KathyWheeler Yeah, I find the earplugs to be both helpful and necessary. 5y
GlassAsDiamonds Okay @BarbaraTheBibliophage & @KathyWheeler - grilled the husband. They‘re the Sony NWZ-W274S and it‘s actually an MP3 player built into swimming headphones so you could easily use them for audiobooks and around a swimming cap. I‘m impressed at how streamlined they are really - he‘s had them for a few years and they‘re still going strong. 😊 5y
63 likes18 comments
review
HLouiseM
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Bailedbailed

This book was full of interesting trivia, presented in the slowest and most bland way. It would have made a very interesting long-form article. Too bad.

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WhatDeeReads

Swimming appeals to the introverted and the eccentric, individualists involved in a mental world of their own. -Charles Sprawson, quoted by Lynn Sherr