AARP Hearing Center
The Guinness Book of World Records always fascinated me, but some records are more respectable than others. I’m not so sure about somebody watching a movie 4,000 times or growing the longest fingernails. But the mountain-climbing records, the running records, the athletic feats — those are impressive.
I never thought about breaking a record myself, honestly. A few years ago, I started swimming in cold water in Watauga Lake across from the Baptist church in the East Tennessee mountains where I’m a pastor. I wanted to see how late into winter I could swim, and I got into November and December. Winter’s in my name and probably in my blood, so why not? I saw those Polar Bear swimmers in New York plunging into the ocean, and I thought, If people up North can stand the cold, why can’t we Appalachian people do it? Mountain people are as tough a bunch as I have ever been around.
Last year, I heard about the “ice mile” and decided to try it. You swim a mile, but the water needs to be below 41 degrees. You can’t wear a wet suit — only a bathing suit and a swim cap. I’d been doing short dips in cold water, but now I started working my way up to 20 minutes, 35 minutes, three days a week. With age, my joints were getting a little stiff, and I felt this type of exercise would help. What really kicked this into gear was when I saw that the world’s oldest ice miler, a guy from Ireland, was 66 years and 20 days old. I said to my wife, Lena, “Hey, look at that! I’m 66 and 100 days old. I can beat this!”
You Might Also Like
How One Woman Faced Her Fear and Learned to Swim
Maria Rodriguez overcame decades of fear around the water and learned how to swim after age 50
What We Can Learn From the Japanese About Finding Purpose
‘Ikigai’ means making your life worthwhile — here is how you can implement it
Diana Nyad Looks Back on Her Epic 111-Mile Swim
Swimmer talks about sexual abuse by a coach and why she decided to jump back in the water after a 30-year hiatus
Recommended for You