streifen wand malen muster

streifen wand malen muster

it's the fifth time i stand on this shore, the cuban shore, looking out at that distant horizon, believing, again, that i'm going to make it all the way across that vast,dangerous wilderness of an ocean. not only have i tried four times, but the greatest swimmers in the worldhave been trying since 1950, and it's still never been done.

the team is proud of our four attempts. it's an expedition of some 30 people. bonnie is my best friend and head handler, who somehow summons will, that last drop of will within me,when i think it's gone, after many, many hours and days out there. the shark expertsare the best in the world -- large predators below. the box jellyfish, the deadliest venomin all of the ocean,

is in these waters, and i have come close to dying from themon a previous attempt. the conditions themselves, besides the sheer distanceof over 100 miles in the open ocean -- the currents and whirling eddiesand the gulf stream itself, the most unpredictableof all of the planet earth. and by the way -- it's amusing to me that journalists and people,before these attempts, often ask me, "well, are you going to go with any boatsor any people or anything?"

(laughter) and i'm thinking, what are they imagining? that i'll just sort of dosome celestial navigation -- and carry a bowie knife in my mouth, and i'll hunt fish and skin themalive and eat them, and maybe drag a desalinization plantbehind me for fresh water. yes, i have a team. and the team is expert, and the team is courageous,

and brimming with innovationand scientific discovery, as is true of any majorexpedition on the planet. and we've been on a journey. and the debate has raged, hasn't it, since the greeks, of isn't it what it's all about? isn't life about the journey,not really the destination? and here we've been on this journey, and the truth is, it's been thrilling.

we haven't reached that other shore, and still, our senseof pride and commitment, unwavering commitment. when i turned 60,the dream was still alive from having tried this in my 20s --dreamed it and imagined it. the most famous body of wateron the earth today, i imagine, cuba to florida. and it was deep. it was deep in my soul. when i turned 60,

it wasn't so muchabout the athletic accomplishment, it wasn't the egoof "i want to be the first." that's always there and it's undeniable. but it was deeper. it was "how much life is there left?" let's face it -- we're allon a one-way street, aren't we? and what are we going to do? what are we going to do as we go forward,to have no regrets looking back? and all this past year in training,

i had that teddy roosevelt quote to paraphrase it,floating around in my brain. it says, "you go ahead. you go ahead and sit backin your comfortable chair and you be the critic,you be the observer, while the brave onegets in the ring and engages and gets bloody and gets dirty and failsover and over and over again, but yet isn't afraid and isn't timidand lives life in a bold way." and so of course i want to make it across.

it is the goal, and i shouldbe so shallow to say that this year, the destination was even sweeterthan the journey. (applause) but the journey itselfwas worthwhile taking. and at this point, by this summer, everybody -- scientists,sports scientists, endurance experts, neurologists, my own team, bonnie -- said it's impossible.

it just simply can't be done,and bonnie said to me, "but if you're going to take the journey, i'm going to see youthrough to the end of it, so i'll be there." and now we're there. as we're looking out,kind of a surreal moment before the first stroke, standing on the rocks at marina hemingway, the cuban flag is flying above,

all my team is out in their boats,hands up in the air, "we're here! we're here for you!" bonnie and i look at each other and say, this year, the mantra is --and i've been using it in training -- find a way. you have a dream and you have obstaclesin front of you, as we all do. none of us ever get through this life

without heartache, without turmoil, and if you believe and you have faith and you can get knocked downand get back up again and you believe in perseverance as a great human quality, you find your way. and bonnie grabbed my shoulders, and she said, "let's findour way to florida."

and we started, and for the next 53 hours, it was an intense,unforgettable life experience. the highs were high, the awe -- i'm not a religious person,but i'll tell you, to be in the azure blue of the gulf stream as if, as you're breathing, you're looking down milesand miles and miles, to feel the majestyof this blue planet we live on -- it's awe-inspiring.

i have a playlist of about 85 songs, and especially in the middleof the night ... that night, because we useno lights -- lights attract jellyfish, lights attract sharks, lights attract baitfishthat attract sharks, so we go in the pitch black of the night. you've never seen black this black. you can't see the front of your hand, and the people on the boat,bonnie and my team on the boat --

they just hear the slapping of the arms, and they know where i am, because there's no visual at all. and i'm out there kind of tripping outon my little playlist. i've got tight rubber caps,i don't hear a thing. i've got goggles and i'm turningmy head 50 times a minute, and i'm singing ... (singing) imagine there's no heaven doo doo doo doo doo

it's easy if you try and i can sing that songa thousand times in a row. now there's a talent unto itself. and each time i get done with, (singing) oh, you may say i'm a dreamerbut i'm not the only one 222. and when i get through the end of a thousand of john lennon's "imagine," i have swum nine hours and 45 minutes ...

exactly. and then there are the crises. of course there are. and the vomiting starts,the seawater -- you're not well. you're wearing a jellyfish maskfor the ultimate protection. it's difficult to swim in. it's causing abrasionson the inside of the mouth, but the tentacles can't get you. and the hypothermia sets in.

the water's 85 degrees,and yet you're losing weight and using calories. and as you come overtoward the side of the boat -- not allowed to touch it,not allowed to get out, but bonnie and her team hand me nutrition and ask me how i'm doing, am i all right. i am seeing the taj mahal -- over here. i'm in a very different state --

and i'm thinking, "wow! i never thought i'd be runninginto the taj mahal out here. it's gorgeous! i mean, how longdid it take them to build that? it's just ... so, uh -- wooo -- you know? we kind of have a cardinal rule that i'm never told how far it is,because we don't know how far it is. what's going to happen to youbetween this point and that point?

what's going to happento the weather and the currents and, god forbid, you're stung, when you don't think you couldbe stung in all this armor. bonnie made a decisioncoming into that third morning that i was suffering, and i was hanging on by a thread. and she said, "come here," and i came closeto the boat, and she said, "look, look out there."

and i saw light, because the day is easier than the night, and i thought we were coming into day. i saw a stream of white lightalong the horizon, and i said, "it's goingto be morning soon." and she said, "no, thoseare the lights of key west." it was 15 more hours, which for most swimmerswould be a long time. you have no idea how many15-hour training swims i had done.

so here we go, and i somehow,without a decision, went into no counting of strokes and no singing and no quoting stephen hawkingon the parameters of the universe. i just went into thinkingabout this dream, and why and how. as i said, when i turned 60, it wasn't about that concrete"can you do it?" that's the everyday machinations. that's the discipline,and it's the preparation,

and there's a pride in that. but i decided to think, as i went along, about -- you know, the phrase usually is,"reaching for the stars." and in my case,it's reaching for the horizon. and when you reach for the horizon, as i've proven, you may not get there. but what a tremendous buildof character and spirit that you lay down; what a foundation you lay downin reaching for those horizons.

and now, the shore is coming. and there's just a little partof me that's sad. the epic journey is going to be over. so many people come up to me now and say, "what's next?" "we love that!" "that little tracker on the computer? when are you going to do the next one? we can't wait to follow the next one."

well, they were just there for 53 hours, and i was there for years. and so there won't be anotherepic journey in the ocean. but the point is, and the point was, that every day of our lives is epic. and i'll tell you,when i walked up onto that beach, staggered up onto that beach ... i had so many times,in a very puffed-up ego way, rehearsed what i would say ...

on the beach. when bonnie thought the backof my throat was swelling up, she brought the medical teamover to our boat to say, "she's really beginningto have trouble breathing; another 12, 24 hoursin the saltwater ..." -- the whole thing -- i just thought,in my hallucinatory moment, that i heard the word "tracheotomy." bonnie said to the doctor,"i'm not worried about her not breathing. if she can't talkwhen she gets to the shore,

she's going to be pissed off." but the truth is, all those orationsthat i had practiced, just to get myself through sometraining swims as motivation -- it wasn't like that. it was a very real moment, with that crowd, with my team. we did it. i didn't do it. we did it. and we'll never forget it.it'll always be part of us. the three things i did sort of blurt outwhen we got there, was first:

never, ever give up. i live it. what's the phrasefrom today from socrates? audience: to be is to do. diana nyad: to be is to do. so i don't stand up and say,"don't ever give up." i didn't give up. there was action behind these words. the second is:

you can chase your dreamsat any age; you're never too old. sixty-four; a thing no one,at any age, any gender, could ever do has done it. and there's no doubt in my mind that i am at the prime of my life today. yeah. thank you. and the third thingi said on that beach was, it looks like the most solitaryendeavor in the world,

and in many ways, of course, it is. and in other ways,and the most important ways, it's a team. and if you think i'm a badass,you want to meet bonnie. bonnie, where are you? where are you? there's bonnie stoll. my buddy. the henry david thoreau quote goes,

"when you achieve your dreams,it's not so much what you get as who you have become in achieving them." and yeah, i stand before you now. in the three months since that swim ended, i've sat down with oprah, and i've been inpresident obama's oval office; i've been invited to speakin front of esteemed groups such as yourselves; i've signed a wonderfulmajor book contract.

all of that's great,and i don't denigrate it. i'm proud of it all, but the truth is, i'm walking around tall because i am that bold, fearless person,and i will be, every day, until it's time for these days to be done. thank you very muchand enjoy the conference. thank you. thank you! thank you. thank you. thank you.thank you! thank you. find a way!

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