To quote the book's cover, it is indeed a "delicious, cleansing, funny, wise and joyful book, so wonderfully full of energy and life."
Deakin is eccentric but a real enthusiast and that energy is infectious. He's no longer with us but his writings remain to help lead us back to the joys of nature.
Read also: 'Wildwood' and 'Notes from Walnut Tree Farm'.
I think that we've all experienced and acknowledged the restorative benefits to be taken from immersing ourselves in water. The wilder the setting and the more we expose ourselves, the more intoxicating the effect. I've taken many a knacker shriveling swim in rivers and rock pools in the Corsican mountains and then later made it back to the beach for a sunset swim in the day warm sea.
I'm always left feeling reinvigorated, exuberant; refreshed and ready for the next adventure.
I'm always left feeling reinvigorated, exuberant; refreshed and ready for the next adventure.
The Swimmer
The swimmer leaves the shore
To test his mortality
He is the sole, vital engine
His actions keep him alive
The alternative is unthinkable
But possible
His discomfort is self-imposed
A discipline to ward off
That prize possession of middle age
Contentment
I shrink against the cold
Eyes sting
I do this to myself
Float then move my arms
Against the indifferent current
There is no disappointment
I must move to survive
And that begs the question
Do I need my life?
No wiser, but replenished, reassured
I turn my back to the kindling sun
And reach for the uncertain shore
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