49-year-old Melanie Barratt becomes the first blind woman to swim the English Channel. Sometimes God parts the sea—and sometimes, He gives you the strength to swim through it.
Before the age of 50, Melanie Barratt did what many sighted swimmers wouldn’t dare attempt: she crossed the English Channel. Stroke by stroke, without a finish line in sight, without anything to anchor her but the voice of her husband in bone-conducting headphones and a kayak painted in bright colors she could just barely see.
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Twelve hours and twenty minutes later, Melanie touched the shore of Cap Gris Nez Beach in France. “It was a dream come true,” she said, having finished faster than the expected 14-hour swim. “Halfway through the swim, I felt scared and sick. I didn’t think I was going to make it. But I had the most amazing team—and I was really determined.”
That determination was born out of years of hardship. Melanie was born virtually blind after her mom contracted congenital toxoplasmosis during pregnancy. She could only make out bold colors and shapes. “My life has been filled with challenges because of my blindness,” Melanie shared. “It often led me to feel isolated and unsure of myself.”
But God has this beautiful way of redeeming what the world calls broken.
“I struggled to fit in at school, so I often turned to the pool as an escape,” Melanie recalled. The water became her refuge and eventually her runway. After winning multiple medals in the Paralympic Games, Melanie stepped away from competition—but not from purpose.
Years later, God called her back into the water. Open-water swimming scared her at first, but it set her free. “The shock of the cold made me aware of every single cell in my body,” she said. “It was freeing.”
Swimming the Channel was her Everest. And God met her in every wave.
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“Life is incredibly difficult being blind, and it’s very limiting, but sport and open-water swimming have given me a newfound confidence and made me proud of who I am,” Melanie said. “My husband and two boys always know I love to push myself and that I always need something to work towards, and I hope I’ve inspired others to do the same.”
Her story reminds us that bravery doesn’t always look like fearlessness. Sometimes it looks like swimming blind into the unknown, fully trusting the One who sees it all.
“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.” Isaiah 43:2
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h/t: Good News Network
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