maxiesmom
The Mean Squinty Eye Works
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2004
- Messages
- 35,825
I guess will never no will we?
But as it is the figure the CDC is going with, I think it safe to go with.
I guess will never no will we?
I am shocked that some of you think nothing of leaving a 6 yr old in a POOL area without watching them. Drowning happens soooo quickly and with so little warning.
And, keep in mind that just because your child is a strong swimmer, things can still go very wrong in the water. ANYTHING can happen... slips, falls, banging their head while jumping in, etc. No lifeguard can see it all regardless of how well they are trained.
We were just at a swim party with a bunch of 6 year olds for an end of the school year party. My daughter can swim. However, there was a child there that she was playing with and they decided to jump into the deep end together. Well, it turns out that the other child could not swim so well. Panic set in and he grabbed my daughter for help (natural instinct). Since she couldn't stand, he was pulling her under. Thankfully I saw what was happening. Never once did she call for help. There was no loud commotion. There was no loud splashing and flailing. He just pulled her under and she was taking on water.
Last summer, I was at a friend's house who has an above ground pool. Her 10 year old was swimming under water and came up to close to the side of the pool and when he stood up he smacked his head on the lip of the side of the wall. He was in a daze for probably 30 seconds to a minute. If he had hit any harder it is possible that he would have lost consciousness. Not good in a pool.
Please do not think that pool accidents and drownings can't happen to your child. They need to be watched. You can watch them without hovering or helicoptering. And swimming with a buddy doesn't really help much because the buddy will most likely try to help his drowning sibling/friend and will get pulled under as well. It is very difficult to save a drowning person in water that you can not stand in unless you are trained to do so.
But as it is the figure the CDC is going with, I think it safe to go with.
Oh of course those government agencies are always trust worthy. What was I possibly thinking. Silly me.
Very well said! So many things can happen in the water that have NOTHING to do with a swimmer's ability!
I was a trained lifeguard and did so for 13 years and even with proper training and ongoing refreshers I can attest to the difficulty in rescuing a distressed swimmer in water over my own head.

Obviously not every parent is in the water with kids that are young..... personally I consider 6 young.
. Your child deserves a parent who is a parent... you are not on vacation from parenting when you are on vacation. You can relax and still watch your child. This thread has opened my eyes to a whole new world! I have always wondered why parents are complaining about SAB being so big and not being able to watch young kids. My thought has always been... well they are in the water with you so exactly how fast are they swimming away from you?Obviously not every parent is in the water with kids that are young..... personally I consider 6 young.
All that I can think as I'm reading this thread is "I'm sure that after an accidental drowning you will feel really good about the fact that you "deserved" a break in the lounge chair while your child swam. I'm sorry but just too much can happen in water and all the "deserve a break" just kill me. Your child deserves a parent who is a parent... you are not on vacation from parenting when you are on vacation. You can relax and still watch your child.
The OP said her husband didn't even know where he was. I think there is a big difference from sitting in a chair watching or on the side of the pool and having no clue where your child is. I'm with you OP... a 6 year old needs supervision. Life guards are their to make sure nothing happens since it is dangerous.... but then shouldn't that alone tell us that we need to be vigilant of our own children and families? We are the ones that have something VERY precious to lose.
All that I can think as I'm reading this thread is "I'm sure that after an accidental drowning you will feel really good about the fact that you "deserved" a break in the lounge chair while your child swam. I'm sorry but just too much can happen in water and all the "deserve a break" just kill me. Your child deserves a parent who is a parent... you are not on vacation from parenting when you are on vacation. You can relax and still watch your child.
Kids should be able to play in the pool with other children without their parents always around. Parents today have it all wrong. We think that we need to be constantly playing with them, being with them.
I think maybe people are talking past each other on this thread, because the first sentance quoted above and the third sentance quoted above are two VERY different things to me (and I think most of the other parents saying that kids need to be constantly supervised at a pool.)
Parents SHOULD always be around when a kid is at a pool. That means they should know where they are and be able to see them. That does NOT mean the parent needs to be "constantly playing with them" A parent can be supervising just fine while sitting on the side of the pool or in a lounge chair as long as they can still see the kid and are paying attention. The kid can still be be having all sorts of fun with other kids without any parental involvment at all.
The problem wasn't that the OP's husband wasn't entertaining her son, the problem was that he did not know where the six year old was in a pool complex!
As many, many posters have pointed out, pools are uniquely dangerous and the simple act of watching (not necessarily playing with, not interfering with, not preventing from playing with other kids or using their imagination, just keeping them in line of sight) can save a life so easily.
What you are saying is fine and makes sense. There are several on this thread though who have flat out said that the parents should not be sitting in chairs, they should be in the water. Some even saying that children who are bored because their parents are sitting out then become a nuisance to them because they then feel the need to entertain these poor children who's parents are not entertaining them themselves. Many others have said things about their children NEVER being in water without them. My post was in response to them, not to the moderate posters.
A break? At a pool! I'm sorry but a pool is not a place to stop watching. I do not think it is right for parents to entertain all day long ...regardless of their age. Even newborns need some down time away from mom and dad.... but not at a pool. Nobody needs to be unsupervised at a pool... not even adults!Kids "deserve" a parent who is willing to cut the strings at some point as well. My 7 year old DOES NOT need me right by her every second in the water. Period. And hasn't for a while. I DO sit in a lounge chair on the side of the pool and watch her part of the time. If that makes me a bad parent in your eyes, so be it, but I think my kid needs a chance to be independent in the water, with me watching to make sure she doesn't get into trouble. I just don't see how that is lazy parenting.T
All that I can think as I'm reading this thread is "I'm sure that after an accidental drowning you will feel really good about the fact that you "deserved" a break in the lounge chair while your child swam. I'm sorry but just too much can happen in water and all the "deserve a break" just kill me. Your child deserves a parent who is a parent... you are not on vacation from parenting when you are on vacation. You can relax and still watch your child.
Kids "deserve" a parent who is willing to cut the strings at some point as well. My 7 year old DOES NOT need me right by her every second in the water. Period. And hasn't for a while. I DO sit in a lounge chair on the side of the pool and watch her part of the time. If that makes me a bad parent in your eyes, so be it, but I think my kid needs a chance to be independent in the water, with me watching to make sure she doesn't get into trouble. I just don't see how that is lazy parenting.
Kids "deserve" a parent who is willing to cut the strings at some point as well. My 7 year old DOES NOT need me right by her every second in the water. Period. And hasn't for a while. I DO sit in a lounge chair on the side of the pool and watch her part of the time. If that makes me a bad parent in your eyes, so be it, but I think my kid needs a chance to be independent in the water, with me watching to make sure she doesn't get into trouble. I just don't see how that is lazy parenting.
I don't see how you can tell me whay MY job as the parent of MY child should be when you don't know me or my child. I know what MY child needs, thanks. I don't see where I said that I wasn't watching ALL the time by the way. I am, but as the parent I get to decide that. I don't think any of us have the right ot dictate what another parent's "job" is.While I agree that your 7 year old does not need you right by her every second, I do feel she DOES need you watching her ALL of the time, not just part of the time. She can be independent in the water and play with other kids with you watching from a lounge chair at the side. However, your job is still to be sure she is safe - and that includes ALL of the time, not just part of the time. Things can go so wrong, so quickly, in the water. It has nothing to do with her swimming ability or level of independence. Like I said earlier, my daughter ran into problems because someone ELSE couldn't swim well and started pulling her under. It happened in a matter of maybe 30 seconds. Thank God I was watching because there was absolutely NO sounds of struggle. She just went down. Had I been reading a book in a lounge chair or distracted in some other way, even for a minute or two, she could have drowned. That is certainly not a risk that I am willing to take so that I can read, relax, or otherwise be distracted. When my kids are in a pool, they get 100% of my eyes. They still get to be kids and be independent but I am most definitely watching.
Drowning is SILENT and only takes seconds to minutes. Most people think they will hear a lot of splashing and cries for help. That is not how it happens. A drowning person is too busy trying to gasp for air that they physically cannot yell for help. The only way you will know is by watching diligently. If it happens during the part of the time you admittedly are not watching her, the results will be devastating. Children have died in very crowded swimming pools without anyone around them realizing that they were in trouble. The only one watching your child specifically is you.