Keep Your Goals in Sight
When she looked ahead, Florence
Chadwick saw nothing but a solid wall of fog. Her body was
numb. She had been swimming for nearly sixteen hours.
Already she was the first woman
to swim the English Channel in both directions. Now, at age
34, her goal was to become the first woman to swim from Catalina
Island to the California coast.
On that Fourth of July morning
in 1952, the sea was like an ice bath and the fog was so dense
she could hardly see her support boats. Sharks cruised toward
her lone figure, only to be driven away by rifle shots. Against the
frigid grip of the sea, she struggled on - hour after hour
- while millions watched on national television.
Alongside Florence in one of the
boats, her mother and her trainer offered encouragement. They told
her it wasn't much farther. But all she could see was fog. They urged her
not to quit. She never had . . . until then. With only a half mile to
go, she asked to be pulled out.
Still thawing her chilled body
several hours later, she told a reporter, "Look, I'm not excusing myself,
but if I could have seen land I might have made it." It was not fatigue
or even the cold water that defeated her. It was the fog. She was unable
to see her goal.
Two months later, she tried again.
This time, despite the same dense fog, she swam with her faith intact and
her goal clearly pictured in her mind. She knew that somewhere behind that
fog was land and this time she made it! Florence Chadwick became
the first woman to swim the Catalina Channel, eclipsing the
men's record by two hours!
By Author Unknown
Submitted by Michele Borba
from A 2nd Helping of Chicken Soup for the Soul
Copyright 1995 by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen