Rowing Solo: How One Woman's 111 Days at Sea Sparked a Movement of Courage
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Rowing Solo: How One Woman's 111 Days at Sea Sparked a Movement of Courage

2:55 Mar 6, 2026
About this episode
This is your Women's Stories podcast.Imagine this: you're paddling alone across the vast, unforgiving Atlantic Ocean, waves crashing like mountains, storms raging without mercy. That's exactly what Debra Searle did in 2001, after her partner was rescued and left her behind. Stranded for 111 days on a 23-foot rowboat named Picasa, Debra battled 30-foot swells, equipment failures, and moments of utter despair. But she refused to quit. Drawing on sheer willpower, she rowed 3,000 miles from Monaco to Barbados, becoming the first woman to cross solo without sails or assistance. Today, as founder of MIX Diversity Developers in the UK, Debra champions women's leadership, proving resilience turns isolation into unbreakable strength.Listeners, stories like Debra's ignite the fire of women's empowerment, showing how we rise when the world tries to sink us. Take Bethany Hamilton, the 13-year-old surfer from Kauai, Hawaii, who lost her left arm to a shark attack in 2003. Just one month later, she was back on her board, catching waves with one arm. Her autobiography and the film Soul Surfer inspired millions. Bethany didn't just survive; she dominated professional surfing, won national championships, and now advocates for faith and perseverance through her nonprofit, Friends of Bethany.Or consider Rebekah Gregory from Texas, whose life shattered at the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. Shrapnel tore through her legs, leading to 76 surgeries and amputation. Yet Rebekah transformed trauma into triumph, authoring Taking My Life Back and speaking worldwide with humor and heart. She remarried, had a son, and runs a business empowering others to reclaim joy.From the mountains, Silvia Vasquez-Lavado, a survivor of sexual violence from Peru, healed by conquering the Seven Summits, becoming the first openly gay Latina to do so. Her book In the Shadow of the Mountain shares how nature rebuilt her spirit, now fueling global survivor programs.Even in illness, Sarah battled a chronic autoimmune disease from youth, turning pain into advocacy. Emma, widowed suddenly, founded a grief group in her community. Maya escaped a violent neighborhood through scholarships to a top university. Jenna Banks survived suicide attempts to build a self-love empire. Dr. Dorothy Dunning Chacko, one of the first female residents at New York's Metropolitan Hospital, established India's first leprosy colony.These women—real trailblazers from Kauai to the Atlantic—teach us resilience isn't absence of fear, but action amid it. In Women's Stories, we celebrate your inner strength too. Tune in next time for more tales of unbreakable spirits.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for weekly inspiration. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For more http://www.quietplease.aiGet the best deal
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