I love the stories about who motivated you to start swimming. They're usually great stories. Let me start by telling you mine.
I was with about 7yrs. old and at a 20yd indoor Grand Rapids West YMCA pool, during a "free swim".
The lifeguard was the YMCA Director named Tom (about 25 or so at the time). I knew how to do the breaststroke pretty good for no formal coaching (my older brother swam competitively). It was a Saturday and there were about twenty screaming kids in the pool until Tom blew his whistle. He yelled at everyone to get out of the water and you could hear a pin drop (someone had to be in trouble). He pointed at me and told me to come over and see him. I thought I would pee right there. I didn't do anything anyway, I told myself, and he shouldn't be yelling at people so loud, I thought. I was thinking of what I might have done in the last few minutes as I walked slowly his way until I gulped and stood silent waiting for him to say something. He said to everyone, "You're a pretty fast swimmer and I want to race you across the pool". I was looking at him as everyone of the kids started hooting and hollering. "Well" he said, "Let's go". He told me that we'd be doing the breaststroke. I wanted to race, I wanted to win, even if he was bigger. When he said go, I raced and he sure looked like he was going as fast as he could, and ---- I won. He looked exhausted after that long 20 yard swim, I know I was really tired but I beat him fair and square. He spent about five minutes explaining that someone as fast as me should be on the YMCA swimming team. I couldn't believe it, he wanted me to join the team, heck, I didn't even know they had a team. Well, I almost hyperventilated as I told my mom and dad that I wanted to be on the swim team because I'm the fastest little swimmer that coach had ever seen. I've been swimming and coaching (I wanted to be a coach like him) ever since.
To this day, that one man changed my life by doing something I try to do as much as possible and that's; find something good someone's doing and, only if it's sincere, lavish as much praise as possible onto that someone. Tom did it for me and I hope I can keep doing it for other people and swimmers, young and old. He was a master at making people feel like a million bucks.
Let's hear your story. Coach T.
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Former Member
My older sister swam in jr high, and in to HS. Since I used to do everything she did, I joined the jr high swim team in 7th grade. She quit soon after that (having her little sister asked along to swim varsity invites was a bit too much for her), and I stuck it out. I credit the coach who took on our team in 10th grade, for keeping me in when life got troublesome, and later when figure skating and horse shows started to seem more interesting than swimming (I balanced the three for a long time, but started burning out going in to my sr year, and thought something had to give). Looking back, I realize he wasn't much older than we were, but he sure knew how to get the best out of each of us. In the three years I swam with him, our team broke very record the school had, and beat teams we'd never come close to before. He was great and we all loved him. :)
My older sister swam in jr high, and in to HS. Since I used to do everything she did, I joined the jr high swim team in 7th grade. She quit soon after that (having her little sister asked along to swim varsity invites was a bit too much for her), and I stuck it out. I credit the coach who took on our team in 10th grade, for keeping me in when life got troublesome, and later when figure skating and horse shows started to seem more interesting than swimming (I balanced the three for a long time, but started burning out going in to my sr year, and thought something had to give). Looking back, I realize he wasn't much older than we were, but he sure knew how to get the best out of each of us. In the three years I swam with him, our team broke very record the school had, and beat teams we'd never come close to before. He was great and we all loved him. :)