
At swim: Writer Joe Minihane had suffered from acute anxiety for years before realizing that salvation could be found by swimming in nature.

Anxious all the time: "I thought it was normal to be worried all of the time about the end of the world, about the unknowable future," Minihane says.

Jumping in: After experiencing wild swimming, Minihane felt a sense of contentment and calm that he found addictive.

Dark days: Minihane eventually realized his anxiety was pushing him toward depression.

Sense of self: But entering the water helped pull him back. "It gave me an identity beyond my work, which I had grown to hate."
![<strong>Frog's eye view: </strong>"Unlike walking or cycling, swimming in wild water puts you in the scene," Minihane says. "You have, as [author Roger] Deakin put it, a frog's eye view."](https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/200602172343-joe-minihane-swim-ben-cox-4.jpg?q=w_1600,h_900,x_0,y_0,c_fill/w_1280)
Frog's eye view: "Unlike walking or cycling, swimming in wild water puts you in the scene," Minihane says. "You have, as [author Roger] Deakin put it, a frog's eye view."

Stranded on dry land: "Yet when I wasn't swimming, my anxiety was still flaring badly," Minihane adds. "Things came to a head when I had a bike accident and broke my wrist. Stranded on dry land, I began to spiral."

Coping techniques: "When the cast came off my wrist and I was able to swim again, I had a new-found appreciation of the water, as well as new coping techniques to deal with my anxiety when I couldn't swim."

Better than ever: "I felt lighter and more comfortable with myself than I ever had. And I had wild swimming to thank."

Life-saving: "It's no exaggeration to say that wild swimming around the UK saved me from myself and made me into the person I am today."