MAY 26 2018 LISTENER 27
open-water marathon swimming?
I’m an all-or-nothing person, for
better or worse. There were guys at
the pool and they dared me to swim
in the bay and I was like okay, right
on. They were kind of cute. I showed
up and I was just hooked from the
time I got in the water. I didn’t go that
far. I was a pretty terrible swimmer.
But it just really ignited something in
me that I had not known existed.
In Kim Swims, you seem to have a
metaphysical connection to the water and
nature, as well as to the Farallon Islands.
I think it really is. I feel like [the ocean]
was a place I had visited somewhere in
another time. I grew up on a farm and I
love animals. I am not age-appropriate
when it comes to my interactions with
dogs on land and dog mermaids, as I
call them, in the water. The seals and sea
lions come up to me and I talk to them
and people are like, “Are you nuts?”
Night Train Swimmers were attempt-
ing to swim out to the islands and I
was invited along on this adventure.
It’s such a tricky stretch of water to be
able to successfully complete a swim.
The stars have to align. It is the toughest
swim in the world. When you are in
that water, you really are rolling the dice
with your life. I know that sounds like
Being an all-or-nothing
person, marathon
swimmer Kim Chambers
frequently ends up in
hospital after a swim.
I’m a daredevil but it is a calculated risk
in many ways, because you’re trying to
do it when the sharks are elsewhere. They
typically show up around August or Sep-
tember and stay until February or March,
but we don’t really have insight into their
calendars.
Given how far you push yourself, it must
sometimes feel like you’re a swimming
science experiment.
Well, you can ask the dozens of hospitals
I’ve visited along the way. Most of the
time I end up in hospital after a swim, but
I have great health insurance. My body
has taken a bit of a beating. I almost died
from pulmonary oedema when I swam
from Northern Ireland to Scotland – I’m
the only New Zealander to have done that
- when I was stung hundreds of times by
jellyfish. But I’ve learnt along the way that
the mind is really the most powerful force
in all of this. If you set your mind and
your body to a goal, you really can achieve
If you set your mind to
it, you can achieve far
more than you think.
And if you tell yourself
you can’t, you can’t.
far more than you think you can. And if
you tell yourself you can’t, you can’t.
Is that what you want people to take away
from the ilm?
I feel really lucky that [first-time director
Kate Webber] understood me as someone
who fell into this journey through trauma
and rallied myself with people who
believed in me. But it’s also about under-
standing that it’s human nature to recoil
from things that make us uncomfortable
and that we’re fearful of.
You’ve said that you’re a feminist. Is that
important to you when you’re swimming?
I think it’s important in this day and age
for young girls to see that you can still be
feminine, but you can reach as far as a
man can reach and prove yourself against
them as worthy and equal.
What’s next for you?
I am working on something. I’m a very
proud Kiwi. I wear my New Zealand flag
on my cap and my flag has travelled with
me around the world. I am embarking on
some new adventures that I hope to share
later this year, but it’s something that
nobody’s ever done before. l
Kim Swims plays in Auckland on May 29 and
June 3.