All the Things I Wish I’d Said (About Water Safety)

This is the second in a series of posts about water safety. To read the post I wrote right after the accident, click here. To learn more about water safety, check out this post.

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You know how sometimes you find yourself in a situation where you’re kind of blindsided, where you see something or you hear something and you don’t know what to say or do in the moment? And then afterwards, you think of all the things you wish you said?

That happens to me a lot. I’m not confrontational. I’m a people pleaser. I don’t want people to be unhappy or uncomfortable and have me be at the root of it all. I once joked that if my life were a Sara Bareilles song, it would be, “Say what you want to say…in an email…and then live in panic while you wait for them to respond and wish that you never said anything…” If I hate my meal at a restaurant, I will probably not say anything. If you hurt my feelings, I probably won’t tell you. I’m a terrible delegator because I don’t want to ask anyone to do a job I would hate to do. I would pretty much make the worst boss ever.

I’ve thought for a long time, a long, long time about writing this. I’ve put it off because it gives me anxiety, because I don’t feel like I’m ready, and then I write a Scoop post about fonts or something. But it keeps kind of resurfacing in my brain, consuming my thoughts, until I do something about it. So I’m doing something about it. And, to be honest, I feel a tiny bit sick to my stomach about it.

You know how everybody has their thing? You’ve got your car seat safety friends and you’ve got your Internet safety friends and you’ve got your bike helmet friends and you’ve got your screentime-is-evil friends, and sometimes you have all of them rolled into one person. Well, guys, I’m your water safety friend.

I shared the story of my son’s near drowning in October of 2012 here. Even though I posted right after the accident, I don’t regret it. Sharing was therapeutic, and the many, many words of kindness, most of which I never responded to, mean the world to me. So if I never thanked you personally, I’m so sorry.

But I was in a very raw place. I couldn’t say things the way I think they need to be said because I couldn’t say those words.

Grief is a funny thing. Even though we didn’t lose him, we came awfully close and I went to a really dark place. I don’t think that made sense to most people, even myself, because he was okay. It was like it happened and then it was over, but it wasn’t really over, you know? I spent a lot of time on the internet googling drowning. What happens. How long does it take. I call it grief porn, because even though I knew it was something that was exploiting my emotions and probably not good for me, I felt drawn to experiencing and re-experiencing all those emotions until I was tapped out.

I became angry, not really at anyone or anything, just intensely, rage-fully angry. It was like that was the only emotion my mind could process, so I did it at full-throttle.

I stopped feeling anything (besides anger) for a good year. In a desperate attempt to feel something, I watched Toy Story 3, which sent me over the edge for a good three weeks when it came out in theaters, and I left shrugging my shoulders.

I became convinced, completely neurotic, that something bad was going to happen, particularly to my youngest. Every time I put him down for a nap or left him with a babysitter, every time we got in the car, I thought that was it. I became totally and completely (and irrationally) paralyzed with fear. I seriously bathed him in a baby bather until he was 9 months old and practically walking out of it.

Finally realizing I needed help, I went to a counselor, who diagnosed me with PTSD. She was very nice and I liked her a lot, but then Clark started having panic attacks (everyone who told me that it would be way harder on me and that he would bounce right back have never met the most intense child on Earth) and I felt like I needed to focus on him. Whether or not that was the right decision, I’m not sure (actually, I’m pretty sure it wasn’t the right decision, but I felt like I only had so much time and so many emotional resources), but we focused on getting him through that rough patch.

So now? We’re mostly good. We all have our moments, and sometimes something as simple as a smell or a song can trigger those overwhelming feelings of anxiety. But we’re good. A very wise social worker in the hospital told us that he absolutely had to get back in the water, not just because it’s a crucial life skill but because if we didn’t, it would be this monster that would haunt him for the rest of his life.

clark swimming copy

So he’s taken several rounds of swimming lessons and it’s become something that he loves. Usually.

clark at lake copy

So why am I telling you guys all of this? For a couple of reasons. I want people to know that even though he’s okay, it didn’t come without incredible emotional implications like guilt, fear, anxiety, anger, and isolation. I want people to know that things could have very easily gone in another direction, that we were exceptionally blessed/lucky/whatever, and that most people who come that close don’t make it, at least not without devastating side effects. I want to talk about what it was like, what it was really like, and I want to say all those things I wish I would have said, in hopes that we can save another family from an experience like ours.

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I think most people have seen the “Drowning Doesn’t Look Like Drowning” article. I shared it when I shared Clark’s story before. If you haven’t read it, you really should. If you have read it, it’s worth looking over again.

But.

What about afterwards? Because just as easily, you could say “a drowning rescue doesn’t look like a drowning rescue.” Sara and I have both said that if more people had seen what it is actually like, they would be infinitely more cautious with their kids around water.

If you guys watch Mad Men, you might remember a scene in the most recent season where Don is at a party and is partaking of late-1960’s-ish substances that he shouldn’t be. In a hallucination, he walks up to the side of the pool and sees himself floating face-down with his arms extended. Then someone jumps in and rescues him and pulls him out of the water and although things clearly are not good, his coloring is Jon Hamm-ish beautiful and they lay him at the side of the pool and smack him a few times and he coughs up some water and then puts on a robe and goes and sits in a chair.

don draper drowning

That’s not how it happens.

When my daughter told me that Clark was under the water, I asked her if he was playing or if he was in trouble and she told me she thought he was in trouble. When we turned around, he was on the floor of the pool, face-down, with his arms extended, just like you see in pictures. It still haunts me.

At the side of the pool, Clark was purple, from his nose all the way down through his chest. Once Sara’s husband resuscitated him, he didn’t just expel pool water. There were a lot of hysterical, extreme emotions, not just from us, but from many in the pool area, whether or not they knew us. It was ugly, it was intense and terrifying and messy and nothing like TV or movies.

some facts about drowning

  • Drowning is the #1 killer for kids between 1-4, #2 behind car accidents for kids between 5-9, and #3 behind car accidents and suicide (!) for kids between 10-14.
  • Drowning is silent and generally involves very little motion because the body is thrown into survival mode. No yelling or splashing or thrashing.
  • Slipping under the water can happen in just a few seconds. The body loses consciousness without oxygen in 1-2 minutes, sometimes sooner depending on how hard the person was exerting themselves.
  • Small children can drown in an inch of water.
  • Even kids who have been good swimmers in controlled environments (like Clark) can panic when things suddenly don’t go as planned.

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When Clark slipped under the water, I was looking up directions on a map on my phone. I got sidetracked by a funny text. Wanna know how long that took me? I timed myself. About a minute. So I timed myself doing other stuff. Going to the bathroom? 3 minutes. Making my bed? 3 minutes. Unloading the dishwasher? 7 minutes. Watching a kid swim across the pool and back? 2 minutes. Reading and answering a simple email? 4 minutes. Talking to my sister on the phone? 12 minutes. Comforting my daughter who got confused about sleepover dates? 5 minutes. Then try holding your breath and you’ll see how desperately quick that time goes by.

I have a dear friend who lost her son to drowning and she compares kids and water to kids and heavy equipment like chainsaws–you would never, ever take your eyes off your kids around stuff like that, and you never can with water.

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Last summer, on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram, I saw all sorts of stuff pop up about pools and lakes and water and I wished I’d had the guts at the time to say something, but I didn’t. Not to make anyone feel bad; I truly don’t want anyone to feel bad or like I’m judging them because I’m not; I just want people to think, really think, about how dangerous the water can be (along with being fun and necessary, which is part of why drowning is such a prevalent problem). If our experience can prevent this from happening again even once, I’ll take it.

  • I wish I’d said that arm floaties, noodles, air rafts, and anything other than an actual US Coast Guard-approved life jacket are not safe and create a false sense of security. Unless kids are great swimmers and are just using them for fun, these things shouldn’t be used.
  • I wish, when people said they sent their younger kids to the pool with their 12-year-old that they would realize that a 12-year-old isn’t physically or emotionally capable of caring for many small children near the water.
  • I wish I had said that lifeguards are there to administer emergency assistance and not to babysit.
  • I cringe when I see pictures of adorable summer toes and a great summer book and a refreshing summer drink while kids play in the pool without their parents.
  • I cringe when people talk about singlehandedly bringing their 5 kids and someone else’s brood to the pool by themselves. You’ve got two eyes that point in the same direction and two arms; until some of those kids are old enough to pass a life-saving course, there are not nearly enough people there.
  • I am totally uncomfortable with summer day camps for younger kids that involve swimming as an activity (I’m not talking about swimming camps where kids are learning swimming skills, but just where they go play in the pool. There was a drowning like this in my area a few years back with a teenager who was not a strong swimmer.)
  • If I could go back and tell my pre-near-drowning self something, it would be to ask what the heck I was doing holding a three-month-old baby with my feet in the water while my kids swam in the pool. What would I have done if no one else had been there? My sheer presence would not have saved anyone. Where would I have put the baby? What would I have actually done?
  • I’m not afraid to say that unless it was a one-on-one swimming lesson, I am not at a point where I am comfortable with any of my kids being in the water without me being right there.

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I ask that you decide to comment to keep things nice. I’m not writing this from a mean or judgy place, I’m writing it from the most tender recesses of my heart. Likewise, if you have something mean to say to me about our experience, even though it’s been a year and a half, it will still hurt and I will still probably delete it, not to be an evil censoring overlord or to have you only say nice things to me to make me feel better about myself but just, well, because.

But first and foremost, as we get closer to summer, as you guys start your family vacations and beach trips and lake trips and pool parties, I hope you guys will take this to heart. I hope you’ll stand up and be vocal when you see people being unsafe near water. I hope you’ll take charge and designate someone to watch the pool at a party if it hasn’t been done. I hope you’ll get in the water with your kids, regardless about how you feel about yourself in a bathing suit or how tired you are. If you can’t give 100% for whatever reason, save the pool for another day. I hope you’ll teach your kids these things so when you aren’t there, they’ll know, too.

I love you guys. I really do. I feel like so many of you are my friends, so thank you for all your continued love and support. Here’s to a fun, happy, and safe spring and summer!

 

woman in denim shirt holding a salad bowl
Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. Can’t thank you enough for this post Kate. I’m up way too late looking at blogs but I feel like this was heaven-sent. We have a pool and live in Phoenix, have already been out swimming this spring. I was so vigilant when we first moved here two years ago but I realize now that I have become too comfortable. As the summer approaches and we will find ourselves in the pool every day (because there is NOTHING else one can do outside when it is 115 degrees!) I need to renew my extreme caution with my 4 young kids around the water. I don’t usually comment but I am doing so now in order to commit myself to becoming a water safety nazi. Thank you. Thank you thank you thank you!!

  2. My husband and I are guilty of napping at the beach while our kids play in the water. In the back of my mind I’ve always known this wasn’t a good idea but after reading this post I will never do it again. Thank you for being brave enough to write what we all need to remember. I’m really glad your son survived.

  3. After operating a home daycare for 12 years in Florida and closing it , I decided to teach swimming lessons at my home. I had taught all three of my grand children and my own children to swim, and had a few friends who lost children to drowning. Last year I had 8 children this year starting in mid May I have 28. I was amazed at how quickly the children caught on, but was surprised at some of the comments at the price. Do you really put a price on the safety of your 3 or 4 year old? I have a friend that has a big Easter egg hunt and pool party every year. She hires 2 local high school life guards at $10 a hour to watch the children in the pool for 4 hours. She says its the best $80 she could ever spend. Please encourage your readers to find some swim program to enroll their children in this summer. 🙂 Nadine Ochs Tallahassee, Florida

  4. Thank you. I have felt like such a over protective, fearful mom at the pool but you have given me courage to just keep on doing what I think is best.

  5. I want to send this to my family. We go to a family members pool in the summer and and scared for what I have done in the past. Thanks for bringing to light things that I will change and share.

  6. We lost my baby niece last year, for still(and probably always) unknown reasons. I absolutely know what you mean by “grief porn.” In addition to meeting other families who have lost children, my sister and I both have developed an obsession with child-related tragedies.

    It was so helpful reading your story. I always felt this twinge of relief-mixed resentment when I heard “near miss” stories, stories about families who came close to losing a child but didn’t. I always kind of assumed that they just didn’t get it, and couldn’t possibly comprehend what almost happened. I saw it as something totally different from what happened to us or the other bereaved families we’ve met since.

    Reading this, I can see how unfair that attitude is. One thing I’ve learned, or thought I learned after my niece died was not to compare tragedies. Thank you for reminding me once again that that applies always and to everyone Thank you so much for sharing this, and I’m so glad your kiddo is pulling through okay.

  7. Thank you so much for this necessary reminder of how easily we can become complacent when it comes to our kids and water. I live in Houstona and around here, we live at the pool. I do have a question though. How can we be confident that our kids are okay to not be monitored at the pool at all times? Before reading your post I considered both my 8 and 10 year olds to be independent swimmers and would let them swim without me watching them in the “big pool” (with lifeguards on duty) while I monitored my younger kids in the kiddie pool a few feet away. After reading your post, I feel like maybe I am giving my older kids too much credit (and though I’m sure most lifeguards are good, I think we give them too much credit as well). Obviously at some point they reach a level of ability and maturity to be able to swim without being monitored but I find I am now second guessing myself. As a water-safety person, can you recommend some sort of measure or recommendation as to knowing when they have reached that level? Thanks again for sharing your experience which has helped in opening my eyes. We are all in need of gentle reminders and are here to help each other out. Thank you!

  8. You don’t know me, but I am a friend of Amy’s. Because of your words, I will not bring a book or phone to the pool this summer unless I am not with my kids. Thank you.

  9. Hi Kate,

    First of all, thank you so much for sharing your story. I don’t have children but it really opened my eyes up to the vigilance that’s required around water, any body of water. Your sentence about how even strong swimmers need to be monitored really hit home. I took swimming lessons as a kid and I was always a strong swimmer, but I clearly remember once when I was in elementary school and had a close call in the pool and thought I was going to drown. I completely panicked and it was terrifying. And again, I was a strong swimmer who had always felt comfortable in pools. As a kid I just chalked it up to being weak (“not strong enough to swim out of it”) and blamed it on myself but your post has made me realize that it’s something that can happen to anyone at any time and that adults must pay close attention to kids.

    Reading your post has definitely changed me for the better.

    (and as a side note, the part about grief and anger really resonated with me. I had a miscarriage about 9 months ago and I’ve been feeling a lot of what you wrote about. Thanks for making me feel less alone!)