By Rachel Parker
My son is terrified of the water.
Each time he steps in, his small back tenses, his teeth clench, his lip quivers. Last summer, he taught himself to traverse the entire perimeter of the pool by clinging to its border—inch by painstaking inch—rather than daring to float across its risky middle. His fingertips leave little, damp prints along the pool’s edge that fade almost as quickly as they appear, marking the boundary between concrete and water, known and unknown.
I grip my own certainties just as tightly, knuckles white against the familiar.
He is taking lessons now. Week by week, his small acts of courage accumulate: first he dips his head beneath the pool’s glassy surface, then kicks his legs while clinging to a foam float. The instructor stands nearby, a scaffold between concrete certainty and uncertain depths.
Then one day, in what feels like a small miracle, he lets his body lean back, surrendering to the water’s hold. For a moment, he floats, suspended between trust and fear.
Rachel Parker writes from the edge of a Delaware forest, where shifting seasons inspire her exploration of ordinary moments and their hidden depths. Her work has appeared in Anomaly Poetry, Penstricken, and Beyond Words Magazine. She writes regularly on Substack at Fragments of Humanity.
Image by Blue Arauz courtesy of Pexels
Wonderful writing.
Beautiful! Your writing put me right there with your son!
I feel this writing deep inside me. My stomach knots and my breath quickens. I nearly drowned once. I love how you, like your son, grasp the familiar. And how you offer the significant yet infinitesimal line, between “trust and fear.” Concrete is a powerful word and letting go always takes courage.
Evocative writing.
Rachel Parker, this is beautiful. What a joy to read it this morning!
I agree…beautiful. I appreciate the delicacy of her writing and understanding her son’s fear. I’m an adult with a lifelong fear of water who, despite multiple attempts at various ages, has yet to learn to swim.
Such a beautiful reflection. After a hectic morning of getting the kids up and out of the house, it offered a nice repose and reminder of the calmer, deeper moments of parenthood. Thank you for writing and sharing this.
The fingerprints, the scaffolding—beautiful imagery.
Wonderfully visual!
I’m so glad you ‘took the plunge’!
This will be the first of many times I’ll read your name on a published work.
Beautiful! Every word is not only insightful, but has an image attached that anyone, especially me, can identify with! Thanks for sharing this piece of truth!@!
I love the moment of floating, suspended between trust and fear. Bravo!
Exquisite writing– building the tension so skillfully, then releasing us equally so.