Good morning.
Here we go again, another wet and miserable start to the day. Have they been mucking about with the cloud seeding again. Oh well, I have enough to do to keep me busy.
This is a photo of the swimming baths in Burton upon Trent, taken a long time ago. The building was demolished. It had some awful memories for me, trying to learn how to swim and being shit scared of the water. Once a week we were loaded on the bus and driven five miles to this place of torture.
It was a Stevensons double decker, just like this one. Who would have thought that years later I would have a job driving them, when I got my PSV, Public Service Vehicle Licence. The baths were long gone by then. I did the school buses, morning and afternoon.
Inside the baths it was freezing cold. There was an iron spiral staircase to get to the top deck of changing rooms. Quickly get your cozzie on and scramble down without slipping, and walk through the foot bath before getting into the pool. The smell of chlorine was overwhelming and took your breath away.
I was in the beginners class. Mr Cotton was the teacher. He didn't care what we did, he was easy going. I just jumped up and down and splashed about to give the impression that I was actually trying to swim. I stood by the side rail not daring to let go.
One day as I remember, they swapped teachers about, and we got Miss Rasmussen, who was in fact Mrs Cotton, though we always called her by her maiden name. From that day the swimming lessons became more tortuous for me. She gave us exercises to do, like handstands in the water. There was no way I was going to put my head under the water. I gasped and choked. I tried but I just could not do it.
Every week when it was baths day I was worrying about it. I told my mum, she asked dad to write an excuse note to say I couldn't go because of ear ache or tummy ache. This got me out of going for a couple of weeks. Dad was not very supportive and stopped writing the notes. So I wrote the notes myself and added his signature. My handwriting was neat and tidy and I could copy his.
I handed the notes to the teacher at the start of every swimming lesson, and was told to sit in a classroom and read a book. I watched the bus drive out of the school gates with a sigh of relief. This went on every week and eventually Miss Rasmussen just naturally assumed I was not going, so she left me alone.
I have never learnt how to swim. The thought of my head being underwater frightens me to this day. I need to see, I need to breath, and I need to hear. I will paddle in the sea up to my knees, but that's it.
I went shopping yesterday to the retail park. Spent £80 in the Range on cat supplies, food and litter. Spent £40 in Home Bargains on some cat food, and some food for me. I might go to town this afternoon because there is a new exhibition on at the Arts Centre, and I can pick up a few items from Aldi that I didn't get yesterday.
Have a good weekend everyone. Toodle pip. ilona
Nice story, reminded me of the Brine Baths in Stafford,.. beautiful Victorian building,… of course because it was so lovely, they knocked it down and build an modern supermarket, think that was in the 80s,… it was such a huge deep pool, and a dark interior,… vast space,… for a small child, I used to cling to the side too. Eventually they build a small pool further down the road, all bright with yellow tiles and a gentle slope down to the deep end,…and a small paddle pool you could stand in,…felt safe and I did learn to swim there,…. Always had an ice cream in the little cafe after,… happy days,.. communal changing rooms and communal showers,… no one cared, all shapes and sizes,.. easy going and full of laughter with all the mums and little girls. Norma in Stafford
ReplyDeleteThe embarrassment of communal showers after a PE lesson. I used to hang around until everyone else had run through and dried off and got dressed. Then when it was empty I stood under the showers letting the hot water run down my body. Something we didn't have at home.
DeleteWe had swimming lessons at Leamington Spa, with the same awful smell of chlorine, the cold brown foot bath, the echoing noise, and the freezing cold queue for the metal basket of clothes afterwards.
ReplyDeleteI learnt to swim in the local river in summer, the water cold and clay brown with a current to help or hinder, under the weeping willows. Much more fun.
The inside just makes cold. 🥶 I only learned to swim at a summer camp one year. No long distance swimming just a few feet lol. But nothing I ever kept up enough to get any better. Today I would sink like a rock. We are expecting more snow here today after two weeks of snow and ice storms. Have not seen grass at all, just snow and ice. Hope you have a great day. I am going to practice a new crochet stitch today while watching the weather out the window. Take care.
ReplyDeletePeople always say it’s important for kids to learn how to swim. And I agree that all should be given a chance to, but don’t force the issue if they absolutely hate it! They can always try again as an adult when they feel more in control of the experience. I think it’s at least as important to teach kids when to avoid water and how dangerous it can be: deep quarries are freezing even in the middle of a heatwave; apparently benign coasts can have invisible rip-tides; posing for photos in a storm can result in a huge wave washing you out to sea. I know 3 brothers who, as children (in the 1980s), were allowed to wander off along a beach alone. They rounded the corner into a cove, and started exploring a rocky cave. Still in there when the tide came rushing in and only just managed to battle their way out in time and back to safety. Heather
ReplyDeleteMy mother taught my brother and I to swim when we were just starting primary school - the "big house" on the farm where we lived had a small private pool that all the staff could use when the owners were away, so no problem with peer pressure or officious teachers.
ReplyDeleteI think I might have got on better being taught on a one to one basis by my parents, but neither of them ever went to a swimming baths. We missed out a lot on parental guidance.
DeleteOh what different memories we have Ilona. I loved the place. I could already swim well by the age of 8yrs old, my Dad taught me.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was in the top class at junior school like you, on a Friday afternoon we went by bus to Burton Baths. There were two pools there, and the girls went upstairs, as you say, to change. The non-swimmers went to the shallow end, whilst about 4 of us went to the deep end to do our certificates. That year I passed my first and second certificate. Sitting dive, swimming under water to collect something on the bottom of the pool and so on. Before long l was diving from the boards, but only jumping from the high top one.
I remember everyone was hungry after getting dressed, and went to the little shop for biscuits or crisps. I continued to go there years later with my friends, and remember seeing men, often Asian, going through to the actual Baths, since many houses in Burton had no bathrooms.
Since then I have been a constant swimmer in both pool and the sea. I took up Body Boarding Boarding at 17 on holiday in St Ives, and haven't stopped. Body Boarding last time on my 62nd birthday.
I adore water, am drawn to it, and have no fear of big waves in the sea, which gave me great rides.
My Mum couldn't swim, she tried as a 21 year old on holiday with her cousin, and nearly drowned. When I was about 20, I took her to Burton Baths to teach her to swim. She was doing quite well with the floats, so well that I let go of her head, she was on her back I recall, she panicked, her head went under and she gave up after that. Obviously we were in the shallow end, so it was only a split second and she then got her feet on the floor. I felt awful, I thought she was relaxed., but clearly not.
I was quite sad when they knocked down that beautiful historic building, but it apparently started to flood, possibly due to diverting the Trent water course up near the Tec, not sure.
Now we have the wash lands, currently well flooded.
Happy days.
Sorry, that was Jean.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jean. You have some good memories of the Baths in Burton. The building was magnificent, shame it's gone now.
DeleteLoved the old photos of the baths. Not everyone likes swimming or water and I totally respect that. I like swimming and learnt to swim at the age of 6. However, I dislike team sports and don’t do well because I’m not a team player. I’m too much of a lone wolf and prefer to do my own thing. I hated any kind of team sports at school apart from cross country running.
ReplyDeleteTeam sports that's another matter. I disliked sports full stop. I am certainly not a team player. The only thing I could tolerate was cross country running. We would all set off together wearing just teeshirt and knickers. The route was mapped out across fields. Ideal for perverts with a pair of binoculars. Eventually we were spread out as the fastest surged ahead, and the slowest lagged behind. I was somewhere in the middle doing my own thing.
DeleteI remember well the swimming lessons. The pool we used was exactly how you described it and we too were loaded onto buses. We had to share lockers and were told to stand back to back while changing.
ReplyDeleteIt was a flippin nightmare for me, till I stopped going.
DeleteWe had an outdoor pool in the town where we lived, so it only opened during the summer. We swam in the river all the time though, so of course we could swim. Our son has a pool here in Canada, it's a popular thing to have, so of course all the grandkids and kids were/are taught to swim. Hubby and I can swim but are not strong swimmers. I think it is a life skill that all should learn.
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely an advantage if you can swim. All those opportunities to have fun with friends.
DeleteNever could swim. Even after adult lessons. Lifelong fear.of water.
ReplyDeleteMy best friend is 68 and has never been swimming, on a beach, waded in water, nothing, because her older brother held her under water when she was little,… she is absolutely petrified,.. we even had to once move inside a pub to finish our meal because the river flowing along side the outside eating area scared her so much. I dont think she is missing out on anything as she gets all her exercise fun from running,. Which she loves,…. Me,.. I don’t like water myself,.. hate getting wet, that’s my reason,… from Sonya in Blackpool, sorry I don’t have a google account.
ReplyDeleteYou don't need a gooogle account. Thank you for adding your name.
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