Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of our friends are at the pool. The BBQ occurs at the pool. The kids go to the zoo and museums as part of school field trips. They're not interested in going on the weekends in the summer.
+1 People I know with pool club memberships want to be with people "like themelves" at the club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Judging from your writing, you are not a native born American, right? Having a pool membership is a part of a typical suburban American childhood. Swim team, bbqs, socializing with friends. It's just what you do, it's the custom. Also, it's a far cry from a country club and has nothing to do with being similar people. Anyone can buy a membership.
You know there is more than 1 person posting here, right? I'm a native born American and no one where I grew up had pool memberships. We went to public pools (where we had swim teams) and socialized with our friends. Your "custom" is not the universal American experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these public pools I read about on DCUM? The indoor rec centers? My kids like to swim. I don't particularly like hanging out with the people at the pool and we have to drive a bit because the closer ones have ridiculous wait lists. I join for the kids.
Reston.
It's a little baffling for people who grew up in Reston to move elsewhere as an adult and hear people asking, "So, do you belong to a pool?" So different, just a few miles away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these public pools I read about on DCUM? The indoor rec centers? My kids like to swim. I don't particularly like hanging out with the people at the pool and we have to drive a bit because the closer ones have ridiculous wait lists. I join for the kids.
Reston.
It's a little baffling for people who grew up in Reston to move elsewhere as an adult and hear people asking, "So, do you belong to a pool?" So different, just a few miles away.
Anonymous wrote:Judging from your writing, you are not a native born American, right? Having a pool membership is a part of a typical suburban American childhood. Swim team, bbqs, socializing with friends. It's just what you do, it's the custom. Also, it's a far cry from a country club and has nothing to do with being similar people. Anyone can buy a membership.
Anonymous wrote:Where are these public pools I read about on DCUM? The indoor rec centers? My kids like to swim. I don't particularly like hanging out with the people at the pool and we have to drive a bit because the closer ones have ridiculous wait lists. I join for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Where are these public pools I read about on DCUM? The indoor rec centers? My kids like to swim. I don't particularly like hanging out with the people at the pool and we have to drive a bit because the closer ones have ridiculous wait lists. I join for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Good thing you're not a member of a pool I guess? Oh wait! No, I see, you're a typical DCUM twat who wanted to passive aggressively troll how what you like is better than what other people like. Carry on.
And yes absolutely you are correct no one in the DMV with a pool membership has ever been to a BBQ or the zoo.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter wants to join a swim team next summer - and that will mean paying for a pool membership.