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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Healthy Living / 5 Reasons to Swim In Natural Waters (as Much as Possible)

5 Reasons to Swim In Natural Waters (as Much as Possible)

by Melanie Fielstra / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • #1  Contact with natural waters stimulates and boost the immune system
  • #2  Swimming in natural waters triggers the release of endorphins
  • #3   Natural waters swimming jump-starts blood circulation
  • #4  Natural waters are essential to a healthy, outdoor life
  • #5  Natural waters are a great way to play (which we all need more of!)

The five reasons why swimming in clean, natural waters as much as possible will immensely improve immune function and help maintain good health.

Boy jumping off a dock into a lake for a natural waters swim

After over two years of searching, we’ve done a happy cannonball into our new home in the Vermont mountains. Quite literally.

We just purchased the remodeled No. 6 schoolhouse in our little town. We even have the original carved schoolhouse sign from when it was first built in 1882!

Even better than the historical features (at least in the kids’ minds) are the ponds on the property, which channel the runoff of the mountain springs within the national forest around us… providing for a most excellent swimming hole. We much prefer this arrangement to a backyard swimming pool.

“Swimming holes” are just what I want to talk about today. There’s something a bit magical about water, you know?

Besides the entertainment of salamanders, bullfrogs, and jumping trout – or shells, crabs, and sandcastles, depending on your location – there are several key health benefits from contact with natural waters and in particular, swimming in them.

Let’s examine the 5 key reasons why we should seek to find and swim in clean, natural waters as much as we possibly can!

#1  Contact with natural waters stimulates and boost the immune system

To quote Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, who developed the gut and autoimmune healing GAPS protocol:

“GAPS people should swim in the natural waters of lakes, rivers and the sea instead of the toxic chemical soup of swimming pools. Natural waters are full of life, biological energy from plants and different creatures, minerals, enzymes, and many other beneficial substances. Swimming in natural waters has been prized as a therapy for many health problems for centuries. Obviously, you have to make sure the water you swim in is as far as possible from any source of industrial pollution.” Swimming in natural waters is also listed in her Top 10 Immunity Boosters. (1)

There has been research done showing that regular immersion in cold water is a mild stressor and immune stimulant, increasing white blood cell count, an important part of our immune system.

Ocean swimming therapy has also been around since the times of the Romans and Hippocrates. Used for medicinal purposes it’s called thalassotherapy. Seawater is full of minerals, amino acids, trace minerals, and has a composition that is much the same as our blood plasma.

#2  Swimming in natural waters triggers the release of endorphins

Endorphins are self-made chemicals that give us happy, satisfied feelings of well-being. The mental benefits of swimming are outlined in this excerpt from Swimmer magazine:

“Regardless of cause, a growing number of researchers and psychologists alike have become true believers in the efficacy of swimming. ‘We know, for instance, that vigorous exercise like swimming can significantly decrease both anxiety and depression,’ says sports psychologist Aimee C. Kimball, director of mental training at the Center for Sports Medicine at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. ‘Currently, there’s a ton of research looking at the various mechanisms by which it works.’

On the physiological level, hard swimming workouts release endorphins, natural feel-good compounds whose very name derives from “endogenous” and “morphine.” Swimming serves, as well, to sop up excess fight-or-flight stress hormones, converting free-floating angst into muscle relaxation. It can even promote so-called “hippocampal neurogenesis” – the growth of new brain cells in a part of the brain that atrophies under chronic stress. In animal models, exercise has shown itself to be even more potent than drugs like Prozac at spurring such beneficial changes.

Moby Coquillard, a psychotherapist and swimmer from San Mateo, Calif., is so convinced that he prescribes exercise to depressed patients. “I absolutely believe swimming can serve as a kind of medicine. For me, it represents a potent adjunct to antidepressant medications and, for some patients, it’s something you can take in lieu of pills.

#3   Natural waters swimming jump-starts blood circulation

Flushing, moving, cleansing the skin, and going back to the inner organs. You can enhance this process by taking a sauna and then jumping into cold water…talk about an electric feeling!

From the Daily Mail in the UK…“People say they feel great after a sea or river swim, which may be because the chilly water activates cold sensors all over our bodies — cells positioned just 0.18  millimeters under our skin — which in turn increase heart rate and give us that “alive” feeling,” explains Michael Tipton, professor of human and applied physiology at Portsmouth University.

“The cold sensors also trigger a sudden burst of adrenaline that diverts our attention away from our aches and pains, creating the feel-good factor. It’s effectively a natural painkiller.”

When we put our whole bodies in cold water, the blood moves quickly away from our extremities, going to our major organs, and then back again to skin and extremities as we warm up.

#4  Natural waters are essential to a healthy, outdoor life

The year that our family took time to travel the western half of the U.S., we picked up a fascinating book to read to the kids. It was called Adopted By Indians and was the true-life account of a pioneer boy raised in the peaceful, happy life of the Choinumne Indians of California’s Central Valley, and how they lived their lives (before their land and way of life was taken away).

Part of their everyday (mostly outdoors) routine was an early morning bath in the river. Young and old bathed before sunrise and dried off by the fire (no towels…no laundry…sounds good to me). It is good to be outside as much as possible.

#5  Natural waters are a great way to play (which we all need more of!)

I think most of us know intuitively the importance of play for children. Maybe far less of us realize that play is necessary for adult health and mental well-being as well.

For me personally, as the mother of four playful kids, I have had long periods of losing my sense of play, and almost feeling incapable of even knowing HOW to DO play. Motherhood and life are tough jobs, and if we are not careful to care for ourselves, we will lose that sense of playfulness that is so vital to our well-being.

Consider these points:

  • An adult who has “lost” what was a playful childhood and doesn’t play will demonstrate social, emotional and cognitive narrowing, be less able to handle stress, and often experience depression
  • Play is the gateway to vitality
  • The prevalence of depression, stress-related diseases, interpersonal violence, addictions, and other health and well-being problems can be linked, like a deficiency disease, to the prolonged deprivation of play.
  • According to the National Institute of Play, play generates optimism, seeks out novelty, makes perseverance fun, leads to mastery, gives the immune system a bounce, fosters empathy, and promotes a sense of belonging and community.
  • Nothing lights up the brain like play
  • Playfulness gives us a leg up on adaptability as a species

Water brings out the play in us! We float, we dive, we see if we can stick our legs up in the air straight, we splash each other….

Here in Vermont where I live, there are plenty of mountain river swimming holes. People swim in them, but what is sheer fun is to wear some sturdy water shoes and “boulder” upriver, jumping from rock to rock, dipping in the swimming holes, figuring out how to navigate around small waterfalls…adventure and improvisation are so invigorating.

So, let’s get in the natural waters, shall we? How close is your nearest swimming hole?

In the meantime … I’m heading out for a dip.

woman about to run into the ocean for a swim

References

Dangers of Chlorinated Pools
Thalassotherapy
Bathing in a Magnesium-Rich Dead Sea Salt
A Dip in the British Briny? It May Add Years to Your Life

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Category: Fitness, Healthy Living
Melanie Fielstra

Melanie Fielstra is a Nutritional Therapy Practitioner, Certified GAPS Practitioner, and Mom of four. She is the creator of Honest Body and hosts an online GAPS class several times a year. Melanie delights in helping people apply healing protocols to everyday life and becoming friends with their bodies again.

honestbody.com/

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Reader Interactions

Comments (48)

  1. Kristin Cusamano via Facebook

    Jul 29, 2014 at 9:40 am

    We were cautioned recently by our chiro not to let our children swim in lakes or ponds because of high bacteria and mold levels which can effect candida levels. Also, recent stories of brain eating amoebas in lakes have really made up our minds about it. It’s ashame it has come to this:(

    Reply
  2. Keri Lehmann via Facebook

    Jul 29, 2014 at 9:36 am

    Was wondering about this just yesterday. Interesting article.

    Reply
  3. Joel Blanchard

    Jul 28, 2014 at 7:57 pm

    I just wanted to mention that you are naturally grounded when in water, and there are several mental and physical benefits to being grounded.

    Reply
    • Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP

      Aug 4, 2014 at 2:09 pm

      Thanks for commenting, Joel. Grounding is very beneficial.

  4. watchmom3

    Jul 28, 2014 at 4:42 pm

    Great article and reminder…the old way is proving to be the best way on so many things! Thank you!

    Reply
    • Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP

      Aug 4, 2014 at 2:10 pm

      Thanks, watchmom3 🙂

  5. megan

    Jul 28, 2014 at 8:36 am

    suana, i just walk 2 miles in the hot weather. sun included. then swim. also my 2 yr old walks this with me. if kids did this today we wouldn’t be fat america. 100 yrs ago kids walked 5 miles by 5 yrs old to school!

    Reply
  6. Nadege Armour

    Jul 27, 2014 at 11:45 pm

    We’ve just moved to a complex with a heated salt water pool. Would that be a bit better than a chlorinated pool? Thanks

    Reply
    • Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP

      Aug 4, 2014 at 2:19 pm

      Hi Nadege,
      That is a bit better yes, but there is still some level of chlorine in a saltwater pool. It’s usually less than a chlorinated pool but its still there.

  7. Emily Greene

    Jul 27, 2014 at 4:50 pm

    The only concern about swimming in rivers, ponds, streams, and lakes is the risk of being infected with Naegleria fowleri (more commonly known as the brain-eating amoeba). Although not everyone is infected by this lifeform, it nevertheless has one of the highest fatality rates and it thrives in warm water.

    Reply
    • Marilyn Lorenzo

      Jul 27, 2014 at 10:34 pm

      This is something to be aware of and not mentioned in the article. Although rare, these amoeba recently killed a young Kansas girl who had been swimming in several local lakes (I believe in Missouri). Yes, it is rare but it is good to be informed so your family can decide if the benefit outweighs the risk.

    • Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP

      Jul 28, 2014 at 11:01 am

      Hi Emily,

      Thanks for your comment. It is always good to educate oneself on the quality of nearby waters.

    • Bethany

      Jul 29, 2014 at 1:29 pm

      This is what I thought of too. Those things scare me!

  8. kelli

    Jul 27, 2014 at 1:57 pm

    I’ve always preferred open lake to the highly controlled swimming pool. The second one never gives me a refreshing feel as the lake.

    Reply
    • Cora

      Jul 28, 2014 at 4:10 am

      I always felt horrible after swimming in a controlled pool–especially an indoor one!–but refreshed and energized after swimming in a lake.

    • Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP

      Jul 28, 2014 at 11:03 am

      Hi Kelli,

      Thanks for sharing. 🙂

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