I live a couple of miles from the Jurassic coast, which features some of the most spectacular beaches in the UK, and from about the beginning of June to the end of September I go wild swimming. I really love doing this — it’s peaceful, invigorating and spiritual — you really feel that you are part of creation when you’re immersed in it.
One of my favourite places to do this is Durdle Door (see pic). I once heard someone describe this place as a cathedral for outdoor swimmers to worship at. Breaststroking through the opening in rock with the sea rushing around you (it’s nearly always a bit choppy there) is an incredible experience.
Bathing is an important purification technique, according to Georg Feuerstein, in The Deeper Dimension of Yoga. He quotes the Brihad-Yogi-Yajnavalkya, a medieval text which states that daily ritual bathing is “best done in the early morning in a river connected to the ocean or in the ocean itself.” Hot water, he adds, is said to be useless.
“Bathing produces mental calm, removes negative emotions, and increases a person’s well-being, vitality, and beauty,” according to Feuerstein. Unfortunately, it’s just too cold for me in this part of world for most of the year.
Not to mention the mental strength it takes to take a dip at any of UK’s beaches any time of the year..brrrr 🙂 Having said that, I love escaping crazy London for a weekend just to be by the sea. It has such a calming effect, wonderful. (Yes, I’m a bit jealous…)
Once past the first shock of coldness, you’re okay if you keep moving!