Anonymous wrote:I was talking to a doctor last weekend who does pediatric heart transplants at a top transplant hospital - he said offhandedly "It'll be a busy weekend because we always get a few kids' hearts over Memorial Day weekend due to drownings." Chilling and true. WATCH YOUR KIDS.
Anonymous wrote:This is so true. I was in the pool with my four year old over spring break. I turned my head to speak to my older child and she jumped off a ledge into the deep end. When I turned back she was already sinking. I was there, and she was fine (though scared), but what struck me was how quiet the whole thing was. And how quick. Maybe 5 seconds?
Anonymous wrote:There were an outrageous number of phones at the pool this weekend. If you have kids in the water, you have no business being on a phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I witnessed a mom today at the pool on her phone while her daughter played nearby, and it struck me: this is how kids drown in front of their parents. Girl was maybe 3.5, and an ok swimmer. In the baby pool (18 inches of water?) alone, no lifeguard. Mom had her side turned and was on her phone. If the girl slipped under the water, mom would’ve been oblivious to her. I don’t think she would have noticed her go under out of the corner of her eye.
Watch your children, please. It’s the number cause of death: drowning.
Uh no. The #1 category is accidental deaths and of those #1 is car accidents.
Anonymous wrote:I witnessed a mom today at the pool on her phone while her daughter played nearby, and it struck me: this is how kids drown in front of their parents. Girl was maybe 3.5, and an ok swimmer. In the baby pool (18 inches of water?) alone, no lifeguard. Mom had her side turned and was on her phone. If the girl slipped under the water, mom would’ve been oblivious to her. I don’t think she would have noticed her go under out of the corner of her eye.
Watch your children, please. It’s the number cause of death: drowning.