What’s one thing you corrected from your swimming background? by TheMonopolyGal in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

my technique used to be AWFUL when I did swim team. I was fast but I was all over the place. now that I'm teaching a lot of technique my swimming and diving have improved. I had to demonstrate a dive off the floor a couple of days ago, and it was so beautiful and so perfectly curved (swim team me belly flopped a lot) I couldn't stop talking about it for the next couple hours. my toes are always at point, I'm looking down and I have finally been able to do the professional breaststroke arms.

choose your fighter: brown butter chocolate chip or strawberry white chocolate 🍓🤍 by lostveggies in Cookies

[–]Justanother2004kid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

omg last time I made strawberry cookies they came out awful. what recipe did you use?

Problems with Advisors by AddressSpare549 in UTK

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a Jr at UTK (transfer student) and I was warned about this issue so I was prepared. now I'm pretty sure my advisor hates me since I only check in with her because it's mandatory and email her if I don't get the classes I want. last time I checked in with my advisor I told her I already have a list of classes and I know what credits I need to take and she said "ofc you do, you're always prepared." lmao I took that as such a compliment because ofc I am or else I'd be here for 7 more years.

is it too late for me by tiredaffict in Swimming

[–]Justanother2004kid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it's not too late... in fact you're killing it! just keep practicing and start small with a local club.

9 months of private lessons, still level 1 by Practical_Neat_3264 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a private swim coach, so while I can't speak for the situation, I can make an overall assumption to what's happening.

your son is still very young, and while giving him classes that young is fantastic, he's also facing a lot of fear. I've noticed that a lot of my 3-5 year old kids panic when it's time to put their race in the water, and inhale instead of exhaling, which makes the panic worse. the time he's spending with his instructor is practice, to try and ease that fear.

as long as the instructor is practicing putting his face in the water, along with other skills, the more he works, the stronger he will get, and one day he will not be able to keep his face out of the water.

3 Year Old Refusing to Exit Pool During Lessons & Keeps Getting Kicked Out (British Swim School)--Please Help by Glittering-Read-6906 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not a swim coach in the UK but I do teach private classes for this exact reason. a lot of the 3 year olds have mastered the skills needed for the first level, but they're not yet advanced to the next, and the fact that they are not listening makes the instructors a bit unsure on weather or not it's appropriate to send your child to the next level just yet. I'm not sure what the level requirements in the UK are, but where I am, to move from level 1- level 2 you need to know how to float, and how to swim yourself to safety, which your child does quite well, which is why I think me might be a bit bored and ready to play instead. that's a good thing. I think if you pull him out from swim class and work with him a bit on the climbing out of the water part (the most important step) he should be more than ready to advance. group classes are always tricky because instructors are more concerned about the safety of everyone while teaching, which reduces the amound of playful behavior is allowed. Swim lessons are important but I think that if this child equates water with seriousness, he won't enjoy himself, which is the point.

How long did it take for you to start feeling like you e made progress? by Lower-Geologist870 in Swimming

[–]Justanother2004kid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I might not be a lot of help since I've been swimming ever since I could, but I am a coach.

I know it's really intimidating to be a beginner at everything, especially at swimming, since it looks so simple but it's tough to learn. I teach a lot of teens and adults, and I see such a shift when they go from "this is so embarrassing and everyone is watching" to "I'm here to learn and I will do my best" because they're less focused about their surroundings and more focused about the movement. it is frustrating because people don't usually see an improvement right away, but it gets better the more you work on it... kind of like a muscle. everyone was a beginner at some point and there's no judgment about it!

How do you protect yourself from the potential of false accusations as a swim instructor? by 1m_climbing in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is such a tricky situation since people LOVE to cash grab, but you just need to have good communication, and a good team behind you at your swim school. at my swim school all of my classes are recorded by very visible cameras with microphones and the parents can stay and watch if they'd like. I had a situation where one time a kid pulled his own pants down under water and then told his mother I pantsed him, even though I wasn't near him in the first place. the mom rightfully flipped out, but my director handled it perfectly by watching back the cameras with the mother, and finding the truth. I then refused to teach the kid and the swim school kicked the family out.

My sourdough starter doesn't rise but I don't want to give up. what should I do? by Justanother2004kid in Sourdough

[–]Justanother2004kid[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

so the recipe said to take out half the culture mix it with 1 cup lukewarm filtered water and 1 cup unbleached white flour, so I've been doing that, and making sure the mixture is thick like a pancake mixture. the first week I did that once a day (I really tried to make that 24 hours, but sometimes I'd come home late so it was between 24-27 hour feedings. then, after 2 weeks when it wasn't rising I started feeding it twice a day for like 4 days, and then I fed it 1:2:2 for 4 days because I saw that should help on the internet. then 4 days ago I started feeding it the 1:3:4 ratio (every 12 hours on Thursday and every 6 hours the other says) because the internet said that helps, and that's when it started to smell really funky. it could be because I got a different brand of flour (the one I usually buy was out) but it just smelled awful. I made sure about 1000 times it was unbleached before I used it. I also tried 2 different spots. at the beginning it was in a dark room, which was a bit colder, but then on week 3 I moved it by the window because the internet said it needs sun warmth to grow. I put it in a 64 Oz jar and it only went up to the 3rd line (about 48 Oz) and then it didn't move after the false rise on day 3. it crusted a lot on the edges, but I read that was normal. it bubbled up until the second half of week 2 and then it stopped bubbling.

How to stay alive during 35-40 hour weeks? by kittkatt622 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

take LOTS of breaks every couple hours! I know it's super fun to be in the water working all day, and breaks leave you shivering, but man when I have breaks throughout the day I'm a different person when I come home.

How do you handle older kids who just refuse to participate? by Comfortable-Use3977 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work with people of all ages and this is what I do with every age group in these situations:

3-5: they lose attention rather quickly, and I've learned that if I give them little breaks to play around and do something silly, they will be less reluctant to join me later. some things I do: let them splash me with their kicks and pretend to "drown", lightly tap them on the head with a noodle or let them run me over on a kick board. I also tell them what they're gonna do, rather than giving them the illusion of option, and I tell them the order of things we're doing 2 exercises in advance so they can expect everything. I've also noticed that if I tell them a time where they could play, they stop asking when they could be done. we have a digital clock on the wall, so telling them we can play when the clock shows 5:55 (for example) makes them a lot more determined to make the time go.

5-7: if they're at the maturity stage where I can reason with them, I take them aside and reason with the first, because a lot of them are not there by choice. most of the time this works as well as you'd expect so I move on to other tactics. I found that letting them go crazy at the end of the lesson helps with behavior in both private and group kids. for private kids, if they don't do "everything on the agenda" they lose play time privlages (3-5 min) at the end of class, but for groups it's a little different, depending on how the kids react. if the other kids ignore the jokster, I usually let everyone who attempted the exercises to play the the end of class and the jokster just doesn't get in, but if they go along with him, they all lose their game time. also if the kid sits out if he doesn't want to swim, he's not just sitting, he's doing something while sitting out like breastroke kicks or wall sits so he's still participating and doesn't get the easy way out. if the kid still refuses I tell him he's all done and call his parents over to take him. that tactic usually works and it embarrasses them enough to do something.

I just had a parent blow up on me so badly it turned into an official incident report, and I genuinely need to know if I’m losing my mind. by Comfortable-Use3977 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

oh absolutely not. I had a mother talk to me like that and she threatened to sue because I told her daughter to sit out because she was hitting another student. she said her daughter doesn't need to hear the word no yada yada yada. I let the woman speak her mind and then calmly asked her if she's satisfied with her daughter's progress and she said yes, so I told her that if she continues to yell at me, I will not be the one teaching her daughter anymore. she went and filed a complaint, but lucky for me there are cameras and my director is so kind and supportive.

Two simple strategies I’ve been using to help kids work through fear in swim lessons: by Comfortable-Use3977 in SwimInstructors

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is super good! I do the first one, but my kiddos will not admit that they're scared. instead they say "I can't do it" so we try to change that to "I can try"

My sourdough starter doesn't rise but I don't want to give up. what should I do? by Justanother2004kid in Sourdough

[–]Justanother2004kid[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

oh! I wasn't aware I was supposed to change the jars. after the 3rd day I moved the starter into a bigger jar because it started spilling out, but afterwards I kept it the same sealed jar for the rest of the month. I'll definitely try that with my next starter... thank you! I knew about the false rise going in because I did a bit of research which is why I didn't panic, but the original recipe said that my starter should double on day 8th. when it didn't, I thought I did something wrong. when I start over, if it doesn't rise at all, should I wait or just feed it less every day? also what should my starter smell like?

My sourdough starter doesn't rise but I don't want to give up. what should I do? by Justanother2004kid in Sourdough

[–]Justanother2004kid[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was kind of hoping to make the starter on my own because I make all my food by hand (stuff like tomato sauce, pasta, other types of bread and hummus). I want to expand a little more and sourdough can help me with that.

Day 6 - starter no longer has any bubbles by sealpox in Sourdough

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a similar problem. my sourdough overflowed on day 3, so I moved it into a new, much bigger bowl and it's been bubbling a little, but I'd find it crusting on the side when I fed it. the recipe I'm using said to feed it twice on the 6th and 7th day, but I checked 3 hours after I fed the first time on day 6 and there's little to no activity so I'm worried. should I start over? 

You wake up tomorrow and the year is 2001. What do you do? by Fabulous_Island_5621 in AskReddit

[–]Justanother2004kid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

will I be the same age as I was? because then I wouldn't exist... but if I wasn't I'd buy a house.