Mom’s water phobia leads to scare at swimming hole

We swam several times a week at a deep hole at Sublett’s place on the north fork of Grindstone. That was the site of my first encounter with swimming and with what seemed like personal tragedy at my young age.

Families met to cool off after hot summer days in the hayfield or over the hot wood stove at canning time. We all swam in the clothes we had on and often went home wet. The water was just barely over Dad’s head in its deepest spot, and there was a nice sand beach near an outcropping of limestone rocks. Those rocks gave the spot its name, "Flat Rock."

Mom was a city girl from Centralia before her marriage. She wore eyeglasses and, in those days, it took almost a week to replace a broken lens. Hence, she had skills in embroidery and music - but not in sports. In fact, she was "deathly afraid of water." I heard her say that many times, without questioning what she meant. Mom encouraged the rest of us to swim, but she never left her spot in shallow water. She taught me how to "mud crawl" with hands on the creek bottom and she encouraged me saying, "Soon you’ll swim well enough to save yourself."

One summer evening, my Uncle Lawrence and Aunt Ethel Henry went with us to the creek to cool off. Uncle Lawrence, Mom’s younger brother, was a kidder, and he’d come by and talk to Mom, saying, "It’s easy. I can teach you to swim." But no! She didn’t budge. I was nearby when he approached her with his face in the water. Suddenly he looked up and grabbed Mom’s feet as if to pull her in. Mom’s eyes rolled back in their sockets and she went limp.

"Scared to death," I thought! Lawrence and Dad and all of us helped pull her up on the beach. "Mom! Speak to me," we said as we massaged her arms and legs and lifted her heavy head with eyes closed. A few minutes seemed to be an eternity before she regained consciousness. I never forgot her horrible, expressionless face.

Of course, she was OK and Uncle Lawrence was sorry. He said, over and over, "Sis, I was just kidding, didn’t mean any harm, forgive me." She promised forgiveness, but she certainly didn’t forget.

Why do I tell this story? Because I have sympathy and understanding of people who have real fear similar to Mom’s. We never knew how hers started, and I suspect no two people’s fears are alike. Mom died before I became a swimming teacher, and I never had the opportunity to help her overcome that fear. But I was privileged to help many others as a tribute to her.


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