I just became the coach of my first swim team, and I, being a male, am having a hard time with the whole period thing. My girls are middle school level, and a little shy about the subject, as am I. Now, I know that you can swim on your period by using a tampon, but they cringed at the idea. However, on a 20 girl team, I've got as many as 6-7 girls sitting out daily because of it. I know that's far FAR too high. I'm about this close to going out and buying a box of tampons to shove in their face if they don't dress.
So my questions are:
How necessary is it that you wear a tampon? Is it an every day thing? are there times when it's worse than others?
And, how can I easily make the lives of the swimmers who don't swim (and keep in mind it has to be for a group of 6-7 people) a living hell. I need a dry land work out that can be done on the pool deck that takes little effort to watch (so I can coach the other girls) and something they can't really slack off - I keep giving them push ups and they barely go down.
I really can't think of anything outside of making the actual swim session fun, so if you guys have ideas on how to do that too it might work, too. It need to work on something important though.
Parents
Former Member
Personally, I think that sitting out is a bad excuse. I'm with Anita: swimming is the best thing to relieve the "ickiness"! I also know the educational system, and having a male coach try to address this issue only opens a can of worms. Is there a female (an older girl on the team, a 'hometown swimming hero') that could come in and speak to these girls?
Personally, I think that sitting out is a bad excuse. I'm with Anita: swimming is the best thing to relieve the "ickiness"! I also know the educational system, and having a male coach try to address this issue only opens a can of worms. Is there a female (an older girl on the team, a 'hometown swimming hero') that could come in and speak to these girls?