Swim class tonight, we had a few more students. after a bit with the floating barbell, I did the thing where one VOLUNTARILY moves from vertical to horizontal position, utilizing both arms and legs to keep in motion. (I can't quite breathe yet -- bubbles yes, inhaling, no. But I'm working on turning my head.) Again, NO FLOATIES, NO HANDHOLDING
(
Read more... )
Reply
Reply
Reply
And when one is STRESSED, floating is really hard. I'm pretty dense for my weight. So I think this teacher's strength was that she got me in control of MOTION first, and then at the very end of yesterday, she had us do a backfloat -- WITH an optional hard/arm motion (I opted for it) to keep us elevated. I can control muscle motion more than relaxing/trusting. One of my swimming goals is being able to handle myself in a moderate emergency, so moving away from the danger is good.
Reply
Reply
I will advise my brother to also make sure my niece is seriously playing in water before she's 4-ish, like Mommy-and-me stuff, if not actual swimming. If you still believe in Santa, you can believe that the water-imps will hold you up. (I don't know if that's what they tried to teach me, or if they trusted me with science knowledge back then). Also, babies don't know much about gravity, and since they're still learning land-motion, water-movement is just another skill to acquire.
I had to wait until I redeveloped a semi-functioning pantheon before I could swim. And I had to trust science AND my body AND this gear.
Reply
Leave a comment