https://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/news/the-positive-effects-of-swimming-on-the-brain/
The Positive Effects of Swimming On the Brain
By Alice Reeves-Turner
If there is one thing all swimmers (and ex-swimmers) can agree on,
it is the addictive nature of swimming. We all crave the smell of
chlorine on our skin, the pain of a long, hard set and the adrenaline
rush that comes from every race regardless of its result. The fact that
so many find it so hard to hang up the goggles is proof enough of this
addiction. However, very few know why we feel this way. The answer is in
science and hormones.
Endorphins, the hormone which quite simply makes us feel happiness
and is ‘nature’s high’, are the key reason why swimming is so addictive;
swimmers have an extraordinarily high number of endorphins
running through their body after training and racing. When exercise is
performed, the brain releases a chemical called an endorphin which
reduces the perception of pain by interacting with the opiate receptors
in the brain. This relationship acts in a similar manner to narcotics
such as morphine and codeine
As a side effect of this reaction, a positive feeling is felt by
the individual. This sense is often known as a ‘runner’s high’. A
runner’s high is a feeling of relaxed euphoria felt after doing exercise
and has recently been found to have a similar effect to the addictive
nature of marijuana. So to put it bluntly, swimming is like an addictive
drug in its ability to get us hooked.
Although
like a drug in its addictive nature, the endorphins released by
swimming are by no means negative. In fact, they have been found to have
numerous positive effects on the body. First, swimming has been found to
be an effective treatment in helping those with depression due to the
rise in endorphins that comes about from a hard swim session. In animal
experiments, exercise has been shown to be even more helpful than drugs
such as Prozac in helping those with depression get relief from their
symptoms.There is so much evidence to suggest the benefits of swimming
on mental health that sports psychologists, such as Aimee C. Kimball,
support swimming as a form of treatment in addition to other methods.
Swimming has also been shown to aid the body in removing excess
fight-or-flight stress hormones, converting stress within the body into
muscle relaxation. This conversion makes the stressed individual feel
relaxed.Swimming a tough set can even promote “hippocampal
neurogenesis,” the growth of new brain cells in a part of the brain that
is destroyed by chronic stress and depression. Through participation in
sport, patients are able to recover from the effects of depression,
making recovery more likely and as well as reducing the chances of
relapse.Additionally this creation of new brain cells (which would have
previously been destroyed by depression), means that the individual who
takes part in swimming will have a better memory and stronger ability to
learn new information. So quite simply, as well as making you feel
happy, swimming can also make you more intelligent.A further educational
benefit that comes from swimming is due to the movements which a
swimmer uses to complete in order to swim each stroke legally. A
swimmer’s nerve fibers in the corpus callosum, the part of the brain
which allows communication between both sides, are aided in development
by the precision in stoke and the way in which bilateral
cross-patterning movements are used in order to swim.
This
increase in the communication of the two sides of the brain means that
cognition is increased and learning is made easier. Numerous cognition
studies have been conducted, and some found that children who learn to
swim earlier will also be more likely to reach educational milestones at
earlier points compared to children who learn to swim later.To add to
this, blood flow to the brain has been found to increase when an
individual is emerged in water. A study conducted in 2014 showed a 14
percent increase in blood flow. This increase in blood flow acts with
endorphins as a mood booster (again suggesting swimming as a treatment
for depression), but also sharpens focus allowing individuals to perform
better educationally.Swimmers can testify to the many physical health
benefits of swimming. However, very few of us think of how it helps our
mental state. So the next time you feel that high that comes following
training, or wonder why you can never seem to keep away from the pool,
thank the chemicals and hormones within your brain that prove yet again
how beneficial swimming really is.
All
commentaries are the opinion of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the views of Swimming World Magazine nor its staff. All research
was discovered by the author and does not necessarily reflect the views
of Swimming World Magazine nor its staff.

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