Sunday, March 15, 2020

Ready Or Not Here It Comes! Professor Ramos Blog

Ready Or Not Here It Comes! For a young child, learning how to swim can be scary and overwhelming at the same time. Having someone there to guide you can make it much easier. It took me a lot of courage and persistence to get comfortable with the water but when I finally got the hang of it, I fell in love with the water and it was hard to get me out of it. I was two years old when my mom left my two older sisters, my brother and I in Nicaragua with my father to come to California. She left to establish something for us so we could have a better life because our country was in civil war at the time. My mom started her own housekeeping business cleaning upper class homes where she made really good money in those days. She was able to save and send us money at the same time. When my mother had all the money she needed, she was able to bring my dad, my siblings and I to the United States. A year later, my parents got hired at an apartment complex in Claremont where my mother cleaned the apartments and my father painted them to get them move in ready. My siblings and I had access to a pool which was great because back at home we did not have one and I wanted to learn how to swim. Before we were allowed to get in, my parents would put each of my siblings in change to help clean a section of the apartment. I was always in charge of taking the plated off of the outlets, wash and dry them and screw them back on. My parents would take us with them over the weekends so they could teach us how to work for our money. We were just kids though and we only cooperated because we wanted to swim. When we were finally done they would allow us to spend the rest of the day at the pool where I learned how to swim. When my parents first started letting me get in the pool, they would only allow me to be on the steps with my floaties around my arms. I felt dumb and embarrassed because most of the children my age at the pool were already swimming at the eight feet with no floatation devices. I was stuck at the stairs where the babies were being carried by their mothers. I wanted to swim in the deep end like the rest of the kids. I remember walking up to my second oldest sister Pal and asking her â€Å"sis can you please teach me how to swim? I don’t want to wear my floaties anymore!† Pal was always the one I went to when I wanted to learn something and every time I asked her she would teach me with no problem. She then asked me with one eyebrow up â€Å"are you sure you’re ready to learn how to swim?† I was not sure what she meant by that with that look in her face but I answered her yes. At that very moment she took my floaties off and threw them to the side, grabbed me and threw me in the eight feet like nothing. I remember struggling in keeping my head above water and swallowing the water at the same time. I began screaming for help and all I could hear is my sister Pal laughing her butt off and my parents yelling at my sister to help me. All the response I got from my sister was her saying to me â€Å"peddle your hand and feet faster!† She obviously did not comprehend that I barely knew how to peddle. When she finally realized that I was drowning she jumped in to get me. Crying hysterically I asked my sister Pal â€Å"why did you throw me in the deep end like that I could have drowned!† She answered â€Å"if you want to learn how to swim you have learn how to keep your head above the water.† I am not sure why my sister chose that method to teach me how to swim not grasping that it was dangerous but I had no choice but to trust her if I wanted to how to swim. As weekends went by my siblings and I going to help our parents, my sister Pal continued to teach me how to swim by throwing me in the deep. My sister’s harsh way of teaching me how to swim finally paid off. I was the one throwing myself in the eight feet, swimming all the way to the bottom touching it and swimming all the way back up and holding myself up. I was swimming like a fish in the sea. From then on, I started to make friends around my age and played Marco Polo with them. We also raced each other to see who would make it to the other side of the pool first or we would throw either a coin or rock in the pool and see who would get it the fastest once it reached the bottom. It felt great finally knowing how to swim and getting the chance to interact with kids my age at the same time. The way I learned how to swim was probably not how most would learn or even the best way to learn but it sure did teach me pretty fast. Even though I look back and think to myself as an adult that I would probably would never teach a six-year in that way, but I still thanked my sister for taking the time to teach me how to swim. I love to swim even more now than I did then. I love summer because I get to go to the beach often, catch some waves and swim most of the day. If anyone knows me, they would know to invite me if they were going to a pool, beach or river. What can I say, I’m just a fish in the sea.