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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Vera Soukhanovskii: Benefits of Swimming

Have you ever walked as a form of exercise? What about going to the gym and lifted some weights? Jogged around your neighborhood? Played basketball with your friends? What about swimming laps in a pool? This is surprising to many people, but swimming actually has a lot of benefits for almost every aspect of your life. My brother, sister, and I have all done swimming for the majority of our lives, so I have seen the effects of this sport on both my life and theirs. Today, I will be telling you all about the mental and physical benefits of swimming, along with the difference between competitive and recreational swimming. 

One of the biggest benefits of swimming is how it positively affects your mental health. Swimming is often described as a relaxing and peaceful form of exercise, and a lot of that has to do with the repetitive arm strokes and breathing patterns. These movements create a steady rhythm, which helps your body and your mind slow down. The control breathing involved in swimming can calm your nervous system while the resistance of the water encourages smoother, more controlled movements. When you're submerged in water, outside noises are reduced, creating a quiet and personal space. Even the color blue, which surrounds most pools, is known for its calming effects. 

Swimming is also a great way to reduce stress. It has been proven to release endorphins, which help improve your overall mood and lower your stress levels. Beyond physical movement, swimming also creates strong social connections, especially if you swim on a team. Competitive swimming involves early morning and late night practices, intense training sets, and long meets, which naturally brings swimmers closer together. Personally, I have formed extremely strong bonds with my swim friends and teammates. We've seen each other at both the best and worst stages of our lives, supported one another through challenges and bonded over tough practices or difficult meets. All of the closest relationships I have formed outside of my family are with the people on my swim team. Even in recreational swimming, there's a sense of community through going to the pool with friends, setting goals, and encouraging each other makes the experience more enjoyable and motivating

In addition to mental benefits, swimming also offers many physical benefits. It helps build endurance, muscle strength, and cardiovascular fitness while providing a full body workout. Almost all of your muscles are used while swimming, and because water is about 12 to 15 times more dense than air, your muscles work harder than they would during land exercises. This resistance helps build muscle efficiently while also balancing muscle development rather than focusing on just one area. Different Strokes Target different muscle groups making swimming a well-rounded form of exercise.

Swimming also improves lung strength and capacity. It trains your lungs to use oxygen more efficiently through breath control and extended breath holding, which strengthen respiratory muscles over time. Additionally, swimming burns a significant number of calories. According to a public health analysis by the department of health services in the state of Wisconsin, swimming freestyle can burn anywhere from 450 to 865 calories per hour depending on factors like weight, speed and effort. For strokes like butterfly, backstroke, and breaststroke, swimmers can burn between 450 and 950 calories per hour, with butterfly being the quickest to burn calories as it is considered to be the hardest stroke. 

There are also important differences between recreational and competitive swimming. recreational swimming is a low impact workout due to the buoyancy and resistance of water, making it easier on the body. It is especially helpful for people with reduced mobility, stiff joints, or difficulty with fast movements. Recreational swimming tends to be more relaxed, with slower pacing and less focus on starts and turns, and is often done individually. 

Competitive swimming, on the other hand, involves four main strokes and a variety of distances, ranging from short 50 meter races to longer distance events. Competitive swimmers often trained for several hours a day, both in and out of the pool. There is a strong emphasis on technique, starts, turns, endurance, and speed, all of which are used in races against other teams and swimmers. Competitive swimming is usually done as a part of a team.

So, after reading all of this, I hope swimming doesn’t just seem like another option on the long list of exercises to try. Whether you choose the calm pace of recreational swimming or the racing and excitement of competitive swimming, the benefits go beyond the pool. So next time you see a pool or hear someone be shocked that our school does in fact have a swim team, just imagine yourself under water, swimming from wall to wall while breathing in the intense smell of chlorine, and recall the physical and mental benefits of this sport. 

Works Cited

Austin, Daryl. “Swimming Just Might Be the Best Exercise out There. Here’s Why.” National Geographic, National Geographic, 19 Apr. 2024, enews.wvu.edu/files/d/7bc14855-1acc-489e-ab70-b3fda8bda2f1/swimming-just-might-be-the-best-exercise-out-there-here-s-why.pdf. Accessed 6 Dec. 2025.

Better Health Channel. “Swimming - Health Benefits.” Vic.gov.au, 2021, www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/healthyliving/swimming-health-benefits.

Cleveland Clinic. “Just Keep Swimming: 9 Health Benefits of Water Workouts.” Cleveland Clinic, 15 Aug. 2023, health.clevelandclinic.org/swimming-joint-friendly-and-good-for-the-heart.

Gibson, Rebecca. “Six Mental Health Benefits of Swimming.” Northern Healthcare, 20 Feb. 2024, www.northernhealthcare.org.uk/news-resources/six-mental-health-benefits-of-swimming/.

“SetMaker - Competitive Swimming vs Recreational Swimming.” Setmaker.net, 2023, setmaker.net/Blog/View/3.



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