When I was a kid, we had a big ass in-ground pool. You know, the kind that people in Hollywood have? Yeah -- except we were in Chicago, not Hollywood, and winters meant that our pool became a death trap for small critters who inadvertently drowned over the long, cold winter.
That mean spring pool cleaning time was a horror-fest for an impressionable and young Aunt Becky.
I remember vividly, my mother complaining about the pool -- the maintenance, the chemicals, keeping other kids out so no one drowned while we were off eating our kale and tofu dinners.
It took me becoming a parent myself to understand why she celebrated with a bottle of champagne, the moment we moved out of the house.
Summer is rapidly approaching here in Chicago, where the seasons range from ass hot to ass cold to construction, and if you don't like the weather? Wait five minutes.
I now also have three children claiming that despite a roomful of toys and other activities, they are "bored." I also understand why my mother chose to lock us outside the moment Summer Vacation began: She didn't have to hear me whining about my own boredom.
Each Friday night, my two older sons spend the night at my mother's house -- she now lives across town from me. Traditions are not easily broken in my household, so this will likely persist into college. In order to assuage my daughter, who is not of the age to appreciate a good sleepover, we take her out for a special dinner and a trip to the store for some groceries. Being the youngest of three, she doesn't get the same amount of alone time as the rest of the kids have.
Truth be told, it's the highlight of my week, but don't tell her, she might get a big head.
Anyway, we always stroll through The Target Store (her choice of name, not mine) and admire the pretty toys. She's recently noticed that they sell, much to my amazement, POOLS.
Not the in-ground (keep trying to type "ingrown") pools of my youth, no. The kind that are above ground and look as though they might require a degree in engineering to assemble.
She's enchanted by these pools. Each time we pass them, she points them out lovingly, and says wistfully, "Oh I WISH we could have one of those." Apparently the 3-inch tall plastic dog pool we have isn't good enough for her. Which I get.
But there is no damn way I'm about to get one of those pools. Even IF my gate worked properly, keeping out rogue kids who might die while I eat my dinner. Even if they didn't cost eleventy basquillion dollars to own. Even IF I hired someone to clean it. Even IF the pool wouldn't ruin the grass I painstakingly coaxed to grow, I wouldn't buy one.
I can't quite bring myself to break the news to her yet, but I will, someday soon.
And when I do, you can bet it will involve the pool of dead animal horrors that I'm apparently STILL not over.
And now? I need a drink.


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Comments 35
I don't get it....why shouldn't they go in a pool?!
I have to agree with Normas16Jeans, I live in Phoenix, Arizona where swimming pools are a blessing. My family and I go to my grandmothers to go swimming, there are pool rules of course, always an adult or two or three around to watch the kids. She has not just the fence to surround the back yard but another gated fence around the pool. The biggest thing I found in the pool dead was a wolf spider and there is no cover for the pool. I was taught at a young age to respect the rules of the pool and my kids are doing the same.
i had a pool growing up, and yes it was a pain to clean. But we never found any dead animals in it... we had a pool cover.
Wow -I've never understood the constant complaining about inground pools. We had one growing up -it was fenced, and in the winter we covered it. No dead animals -ever -and minimal work with chemicals to get it pretty when the cover came off. Not sure how old you are, but I'm 42, and most of my life we also had an automated pool vacuum that kept it clean, so we really didn't have to do much of anything. We all LOVED it! I guess it's all about how much you enjoy something, but they have even more advanced technology now -as well as saltwater pools -and they just aren't that big of a deal to keep up.
wow - we've had an in gound pool for 19 years. No dead animals over the winter. No problems with neighbors' kids. And I'm not the biggest fan of pools, but my husband wanted it. And he ain't too ambitious, so if it was that much work, he wouldn't do it. Acutally it is about 89 degrees, and I just got out of the pool (first time this year) and really enjoyed relaxing in it. But if you are that negative towards the idea, I wouldn't get one (any kind) if I were you!
Are you proud of the fact you live in fear and your children will have less in their lives than you did because your mother was more willing to do what her children wanted than you are? You seem to relish the fact your child wants something and you are denying it to her based on the fear of some rogue child breaking into your yard and drowning. I pity people like you and I feel sadness for all the things you child will miss out on by having such a weak person as her mother. Have that drink, pop a pill and chill. Put up a no tresspassing sign and let the parents of the nighborhood worry about their own children. Stop denying your child the experience of youth and the satisfaction of having a pool because you fear the litigious society we live in.
We had an above-ground pool. Our yard wasn't level, so it drooped at one end. We spent a ton of money on sand to try to level the yard. It didn't work. The pool still drooped. My husband failed to keep the chemical maintenance up (not my job), and it got all green and icky, several times. And of course it ruined any semblance of grass (think bermuda grass) we once had. We moved. I keep thinking, gosh I wish we had another above-ground pool here (especially since grass won't even grow in this one section). But. The yard isn't level, and we are NOT spending squazillions of dollars to level it. And if the chlorine splashes out, as I know it will, it will ruin the tiny little tomatoe and pepper plot we carefully cultivated. Sigh. We pay good money to go up the street to the nice gym with the beautiful pool. So we just need to drag our asses there...