My kids are learning to swim—
taking lessons this week.
I have always felt at home in the water,
swimming came easy
like the smiles and hugs
between me and my father
who taught me to swim
but little about being a dad.
My relationship with him
gnarled, tangled as the wrist-thick roots
of the big oak tree
behind the basketball goal
with the home-made backboard and pole
(grandpa was frugal, you know).
Where dad and I played one-on-one
in the long summer afternoons
when I didn’t feel like a kid missing a parent,
instead—my father’s son.
He missed most of my swim meets;
I was so damn proud of my breaststroke,
tiny blue ribbons and medals
now tucked away, forgotten
in some box—magic gone—
returned to scraps of fabric and metal.
I watch my kids learn to swim.
When they look for me, I’m here,
breaking cycles, beaming:
I don’t tread the same water
as my forefathers.
4 thoughts on "My kids are learning to swim—"
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Nice intergenerational poem- you nailed the last line!
Thank you!
SUPPOSEDLY we learn to parent from our parents, but like you, I purposely did things differently. Using swimming to tie it all together is a great approach. The way you expressed your purposeful shift from parenting you experienced into your own parenting experience is strong. Thanks for sharing this!
Thank you E. E. Parenting has been the most challenging but rewarding endeavor of my life.