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How I went from being afraid of the deep to completing a 1.5km swim race in Hong Kong

How I went from being afraid of the deep to completing a 1.5km swim race in Hong Kong

Until 18 months ago, I could not swim. Actually, I would go so far as saying I was terrified of deep water. But, this week, I completed my first 1.5-kilometre open-water swim race at Hong Kong's Deep Water Bay.
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It may seem strange for a 32-year-old who covers sport for the Post to be unable to swim, but I am not alone. According to Splash Foundation, almost half of the city's children cannot do so – a figure that is similar for adults and even higher among domestic workers.
I decided, after a knee injury ruled out many forms of cardiovascular exercise, that the time had come to conquer my fear of the deep.
'Forty-seven per cent of secondary school kids live without the ability [to swim],' said Simon Holliday, the foundation's co-founder. 'And among the migrant domestic worker population, it is probably 70 or 80 per cent. So, huge numbers can't swim, and all they need is the opportunity, which is what Splash tries to do.'
My fear stemmed from a swimming lesson at school in my hometown of Sheffield, England, when I was around five years old. For some reason, I panicked when in the deep end, started thrashing around and had to be pulled out by a lifeguard.
Sport writer Lars Hamer, who is 32, only recently learned to swim. Photo: Jonathan Wong
That 30-second episode meant that for more than two decades I could not even put my head under water in the bath, let alone contemplate swimming 1,500 metres in the ocean.

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