Why is it that goldfish never drown? I asked myself that the other day when thinking about the large amount of drownings over the summer season 2009. As a Water Safety Instructor for the Red Cross you can’t help but feel a personal attachment when you hear that someone, someplace has drowned. It’s something that you know doesn’t have to happen.
While teaching the kids this year I noticed that more of them seemed afraid and unwilling to connect with the water. I am not sure why that is because usually in any class there are one or two that have trouble letting themselves go into the arms of the water. It could be that there are many more reasons to be fearful or that these particular children had not had any previous experience in the water. Under the best conditions sometimes parents have neither the time nor the extra income to give lessons to their children, and some people simply have no access to a pool.
Nevertheless, living here in the South where there are ample opportunities to swim at the pool, lake, and beach, not to mention our incredible weather, it’s very easy to be able to take advantage of the water for both sport and relaxation. Some of the parents I know often tell me that swimming is fundamental, just like reading, and that it is a necessary part of any child’s tool box to have that information and those skills. Looking back at my own life and the lives of my children I feel like swimming was as much social as anything else we did while growing up. There were many pool parties and trips to the lake, if not with our own family, with friends. Learning to water ski and having that experience of jumping into the water on a hot summer’s day just to cool down and float as if in a space place....I wouldn’t take anything for those times.
This summer season of 2009 was rife with drownings that were very dramatic indeed. One that sticks out in my mind was a family visiting another families’ home. There were two children, one four and the other six. The four year old fell into the deep water end of an inground swimming pool and was unable to swim, so his frightened father jumped in after him, and the father could not swim either, so then the mother who was observing the whole thing jumped in and all three of them drowned. The other child, the 6 year old, watched the whole ordeal. His world certainly will never be the same. The news clip showed three bodies covered on gurneys when the coroner got to the scene.
Another drowning involved a woman about 50 years of age who had gone swimming at her local community pool. There was no one around, either swimming or lifeguarding and she went in to swim at her own risk. Her body was found floating on the bottom of the pool a couple of hours llater by some people who showed up to the pool. They don’t say ‘never swim alone’ for nothing. Even though the signage was posted No Lifeguard on Duty and Swim At Your Own Risk, this tragedy could have been avoided.
There were countless other drownings in the white waters and lakes this year. College age kids that just disappeared under the water. Granted there are many differences when you are being carried by a rip current after falling off a raft or kyack versus swimming in a lake where there is no visibility but bottom line you must remember to ‘go with the flow’ because if you fight the water it will invariably win, sapping your strength, taking your breath, drowning you.
As a water person my whole life I have come to realize that there is great pleasure found in the waves holding you, supporting you, but without the proper respect and knowledge of the water you can have the life taken out of you quickly. So the goldfish does feel at home in the water, going with the flow, keeping a cool head. There is much to be learned from that.
If we keep a cool head in any emergency situation I think the end result can be positive. For instance if someone is having trouble in the water call the professionals, 911, and then try to find something that you can throw them. Improvise if there is no life ring, things that float until the professionals can get there and that way you make a difference rather than becoming another fatality. By using good old ‘common sense’ we can accomplish much. Don’t let a crisis take your brain and scramble it like eggs.
The medium of water is most responsive to ‘going with the flow’. When in a situation where you are being carried just let it happen and try to keep your feet in front of you to push if given the opportunity. The Navy Seals understand how to make the water work for them when taking a beach on a dark moon, by using resting strokes and letting the water carry them. This is very important information when you need to keep your power in the water.
And finally one of the most basic rules of the water is to never swim alone because no matter how good you are there are always things that can happen out of our control. Seizures, head injury, stroke, or just choking for some random reason can take someone down who otherwise has good command of themselves in the water. I am amazed that people will take a chance in a pool or the ocean when they know better. If you have a baby pool party with an inflatable pool remember to turn it upside down afterwards so not to tempt a child later to fall into it alone. It takes a small amount of water to be dangerous.
Let’s keep a cool head like the goldfish and be comfortable and safe in the water. That’s the way it was meant to be, fun.
Oh, and with all this talk of goldfish, please don’t go swallowing them!
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