The ocean doesn’t always roar before it takes you. Sometimes, it looks calm, almost inviting. That’s what terrifies me. One quiet patch of water, no waves, no warning… and suddenly you’re being dragged away from shore.
You don’t even realize what’s happening until your chest burns, your legs fail, and the shore shrinks into a distant, mocking li… Continues…
I grew up fearing water, convinced that anything deeper than my knees could swallow me whole.
Years later, hearing about that strange, waveless patch my friend saw forced me to face a darker truth: the most dangerous water often looks the safest.
That “quiet” lane in the surf is a rip current—water rushing back out to sea, fast, focused, and utterly indifferent to panic.
Learning how it works didn’t erase my fear, but it gave it shape.
Now I know to look for gaps in breaking waves, shifting colors, foam streaming seaward. I know that if I’m ever caught, I must not fight the ocean head‑on, but slip sideways,
parallel to the shore, until the grip loosens. I may still stay mostly on the sand, toes barely wet, heart racing. But knowledge turns blind terror into cautious respect—and that might be the difference between walking away and never coming back.