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Amy's avatar

Thanks for writing this! Water safety is near and dear to my heart. I have so many thoughts! I was a lifeguard and water safety instructor through college and law school, and emphasizing water safety with my kids is one of my Big Things. They are 15 and 12 now. My older son did Infant Survival Swimming — which was intensive every day training as a 1yo that, after almost a month, really did teach him to roll onto his back and kick to a wall. Unfortunately the instructor moved out of state after his first year, so he didn’t get the critical refresher lessons, and my younger son didn’t learn as an infant at all. I do think it helped my older son learn to swim and develop a healthy respect for the water, but I know it’s not realistic for most people.

One set of preschool swim lessons is not going to make a kid water safe in all conditions. And, as you pointed out, there’s a continuum. I made my kids participate on swim team until they were in middle school (Covid made this difficult, and then they closed our community pool for a year’s renovations; I would have liked to have done this longer!). Every year it seemed we’d hear about some high school or college kids who drown in a lake trying to swim across some expanse that proved to be too much, and I tell my kids that’s why they do swim team (and why you always wear a life jacket in lakes). Swim team creates strong swimmers from swimming every day and working on the proper form for different strokes. My kids hated it because the water was so cold early in the season, so I bought them shorty wet suits when they were really little, and they kept going.

My real test for feeling like they were good swimmers was whether they were comfortable swimming in the ocean with big waves, and I decided they were finally there last year (which is great because that was the year swim team became difficult without the usual pool). But! They have to keep up their skills and have a healthy respect for the water, and I will be sure to emphasize this forever. (Big waves in Lake Michigan, eg, are more dangerous than the same big waves in the ocean; the lack of buoyancy in lakes can be a surprise.) That said, the swim team experience I had as a kid/teen made it so triathlon training for the swim is easy for me as an adult — and swimming is by far my best event. So it’s absolutely a skill that sticks around for life, and I hope my kids continue to swim for exercise as they get older! I will encourage both boys to get lifeguard certified, too.

One thing I tell everyone: I never used any kind of floaties on my kid. Not water wings, not the kind that wrap around the chest. I used coastguard approved life vests when on open water of course, but never an artificial floatation device that gave them “autonomy” in the pool. I wanted them to know they couldn’t swim and that they needed to be with me (and working on swim skills!) or another adult in the water. Small children don’t fully understand that they can’t swim without the floats, and they will make a bad decision to jump in the water without them because they aren’t capable of understanding that sometimes that’s ok and sometimes it’s not. I’ve seen it happen.

That false sense of security can happen for other reasons, too! When my younger son was about 3 or 4, he jumped into an unfamiliar pool thinking he’d be able to hold onto the side of the pool. Instead of a ledge though, there was a slick 3’ tile wall, so he panicked and had to be pushed to safety. It didn’t help that it was winter and it had been awhile since he’d been swimming, so his skills weren’t automatic. (We were visiting friends in Miami.). The pool edge was a crutch for my kid, and I didn’t even realize it. This is another example of why we always watch the pool.

My challenge now is when the boys have friends over to swim in our pool. I watch the pool constantly, and I’m sure my older son in particular wishes I wouldn’t, but he understands. We have an automatic pool cover, which does give me peace of mind when we have small children over to the house because I can really secure the pool. But if the cover is open, I’m watching the pool.

Thanks again for posting this!

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The Standards Department's avatar

THANK YOU for writing this. It's so incredibly important especially as we see a rise in drownings post-pandemic. I'm a former lifeguard, swim coach, and swim instructor. My son, who will be 7 at the end of the summer, is a total fish and just made swim team. He's taken swim lessons since he was a baby, both safety-focused and technique-focused. And I watch him like a hawk because you just never, ever know. We are super lucky to live in a community with a huge, well-staffed public pool and where I know a lot of the lifeguards - they've given my son lessons, or coach him on team, or are our neighbors - and know they do some very rigorous training, and they cannot have their phones or even smartwatches on the chair with them. I'm comfortable letting my kid go off the diving boards, for instance, while I sit on the side because guards are on him. The ocean's a whole different ballgame, for both of us.

Anyway, my thoughts are - keep putting your kid in lessons, if you are able, because one set of lessons won't make them a swimmer and you need constant reinforcement. Invest in the safety lessons but know that the technique ones will help them panic less if they do need to swim to safety as well. Emphasize repeatedly that the water is fun but safety is key.

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