Bussed in from other parts of the DMV you mean?
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Not in the DMV. Like the PP above who grew up nowhere near there. If we're making sweeping generalizations about access to pools in the US then we're not just talking about one region. |
No one is making generalizations but you. |
Training wheels are in the same vein as water wings. They dont ever help you learn. If your son wants to ride a bike ditch the training wheels. Or come back in 4 years and ask why your 9 year old cant ride a bike and their friends can. |
100% this. Get a balance bike when they are 2 and they will never need training wheels. You need to prioritize basic skills like swimming and riding a bike. |
Puddle Jumpers don’t help kids at all. And many many parents overrely on them and have a false sense of security when their kids are wearing them. |
I guess you're not actually reading this just feeling the urge to post nonsense? |
That’s INSANE. |
| Puddle jumpers and training wheels are nothing more than money making schemes. |
I have a very confident and athletic and strong 5 year old and he will not for the life of him put his head under the water or attempt to swim. He’s had 10 private swim lessons this winter and has made almost no progress. He barely tries to kick or paddle he just looks anxiously around him the whole time, and when he is supposed to put his head under to pick up a dive stick in like, waist deep water, he cries. He has never once worn floaties and we were at the pool 3-4x a week all summer since he was a baby. I don’t know what it is, he loves the water but only up to his waist. So basically, it is not a failure on my part nor on the part of many other parents! He rode his bike without training wheels by 3.5, for reference. |
I have heard they actually increase drowning risk because the kid gets false confidence in water. I actually have a childhood memory of not wanting to leave the pool and jumping in the deep end after my mother took off the lifejacket and her having to jump in after me. |
Np/ how is that insane? If you grow up in a flyover state and can’t afford a summer pool club (or, you weren’t allowed to join because of your race/ there weren’t any nearby/ etc) how do you expect people to learn to swim? The bathtub? Do some research on the history of swim clubs in America and then report back with your answer as to why it's a stereotype that black people cant swim. Also? Good for them for learning as adults. |
The average human cannot swim, it is actually very common and speaks to the relative wealth (access to clean pools with lifeguards) of North Americans that the average person can swim here. |
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Water wings are unsafe - they can float up to her wrists and then her hands are above water but her head isn't. I'm surprised they are allowed at your pool - when I was lifeguarding 20 years ago they were banned at every pool I worked at.
If she's uncomfortable in water, put her in a coast guard approved floatation device. Then sign up for swimming lessons. 1-1, or 2-1 (the pool may have options for you that will work). Go to the rec center for 1-1 lessons because they will probably be more affordable than the overpriced swim schools. |
Puddle jumpers are fine. They are a Coast Guard approved floatation device. Parents can over-rely on anything, including water wings (which are NOT USCG approved and are actually dangerous in water). |