How record-breaking swimmer Diana Nyad found strength and healing in the water
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Mar 29, 2025
From anger to awe: How Diana Nyad overcame “debilitating trauma” to conquer a near-impossible 53-hour swim at 64.
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I was so, you know, known around the world, really, for finally stumbling upon that beach in Key West
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after trying that Cuba Swim Expedition dream for 35 years and failing four times
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I would imagine the oration that I would give on the beach if I finally did make it to the other shore
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but the truth is it didn't happen that way. I was stunned by the emotion of it all, by the physical duress of it all
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And the first words I said to those screaming people on that beach were
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we, meaning all of us, should never, ever give up. When I was 14, I didn't know at that time that my talent as an athlete
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was going to be swimming over the curvature of the earth, you know, with a steel trap mind
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And I was dreaming of the Olympics. I quite, you know, dedicated myself to that vision
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Every single day got up at 4.30 in the morning, Christmas Day included. There was never a day I
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didn't get up at 4.30. I got to swim practice first because I wanted to be first. I wanted to
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work the hardest. And my coach thought I was going to be one of the best in the world. He was my
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champion and I was his champion. I'm somewhat reluctant, you know, to dwell on, oh, the poor
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me and the things that happened to me. And on the other hand, I can't live anybody else's life but
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my own. And I can't have this psychological makeup of anybody else but myself. So yes
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I went through trauma and that first attack, that first sexual molestation by my coach
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This father figure of mine it was devastating isn strong enough It was a debilitating moment You can say it wasn my fault
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It wasn't my fault. It doesn't matter. You're a child at the time and you take it as your fault
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It's just what the syndrome is of shame. I told my mom she either didn't believe me or it was much too much for her to take
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And so I started to escape. I started to be somewhere else
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I started to be someone else. But swimming was my safe place
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When I got in the pool or out in the ocean, all my fears went away
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I was absolutely safe. Nobody could touch me. Nobody could talk to me, look at me sideways
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I expressed my anger out there. I would stop in the middle of a set of 400s and slap the water and go underwater and scream, you know, at the top of my lungs
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and when I was 17 I knew by the time the last 100 meter backstroke before the Olympic trials was
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coming that I didn't have the speed and I was walking down that pool deck with the weight of
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the world on my shoulders the sexual abuse had now gone on for three years I had been silenced
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I had been shamed and so the weight of that was enormous and a friend of mine Suzanne came and she
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felt something and she shook me and she said, I know your chances are slim, but don't let this
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hundred meter backstroke go without giving it all of your soul and your heart and your body
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I tell you what, when you finish this race, I want you to close your eyes, close your fists
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and say it and mean it. I couldn't have done it a fingernail faster. She said, I guarantee you
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you do it that way. There's nothing more you could possibly do. No matter what happens
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you have no regrets I didn make it I was going on to the rest of my life not this esteemed Olympic trials And I walked across that pool deck It was a starry night in Florida I took my heavy swim bag and put it on the deck and I said to myself
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no matter what you do, no matter where you go, you live every day of your life, so you can't live it a fingernail better
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Many decades later, I was getting close to 60. I had this great job traveling all around the world, covering the biggest sporting events
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interviewing all these people, chasing their excellence. And I am not feeling like a doer anymore
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I'm watching all these people chase their dreams and I'm not chasing any dreams of my own
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And I was with my mom one day. She had Alzheimer's and she said to me, I was the worst mother in the world, wasn't I
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and I knew what she meant. And I said, no, mom, I lied. I said, you were the best mother in the
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world. And she cried and I cried and we held each other. But I knew that was the day I forgave her
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for not being there for me younger, that she just couldn't do it. She wasn't capable
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And that was the day she asked for forgiveness. And when my mom died, something sparked even
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bigger to say, well, mom was just 82 when she died and now I'm going to be 60, only 22 more years
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What am I going to do with those? I'm going to go back and chase that maybe impossible dream
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Everybody else had found it impossible so far. It had meant much more to me, that swim. It always
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has, always will, than another notch in the endurance belt. And when I got back in and I
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I hadn't swum in 30 years. It took tremendous discipline and even agony
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It's grueling out there, all those long hours, and not to mention what the body goes through with a roiling sea and a powerful sea but also what the mind goes through to be in a state of sensory deprivation you don see well with your goggles you turning your head 53 times a
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minute to breathe with a tight cap on you so you're in a state of the interior of your mind
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very quickly in just seven eight hours not to mention 50 60 non-stop hours swimming
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But the truth is, the water itself, the water itself was very healing
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I wasn't any longer swimming with anger. I was swimming with awe of this blue planet of ours in the middle of the Gulf Stream on a summer's night
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You can literally see two billion stars above you. It's so clear out there
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There's no other orb in all of the universe that we know, at least today, that's blue
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We have water and we have DNA and animals and vegetation. We have life
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And so I felt that out in the ocean. I felt a connection and you feel the surge of tides under the steam of your own body
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under the engine of your own will. And you feel the lift of the waves sometimes rather than the crash and the barrier of the waves
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So I don't know if there's anybody who quite feels the depth of emotion of what I do when I look out at that horizon
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That's the way I want to go through every day, just an unwavering, awake, alert commitment to feelings and to thoughts
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And to be quite poetic about it, I want that last day to come, that last breath
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and for me to say, I did it all. I did it all so I couldn't do it a fingernail better
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