When I think of summer, I think of the St. Charles Community
Pool. Set back amongst pine and oaks in the corner of my hometown’s community
park—the one with the rusty canon and the creaky swings and the water fountain
within the mouth of a cartoonish-yellow concrete lion—this pool’s sidewalk
perimeters are soaked with memories, permanently absorbed within the pools basin’s
walls (along with the chlorine smell and urine, I suppose).
My mom signed my little brother and I up for swimming
lessons at the St. Charles Pool when we were young. I learned the backstroke
and the sidestroke and how to float on my back there. I learned to breathe
underwater there.
I still remember.
The instructor took us to the pool wall, my small class of
fellow students grasping the edge. “Kick,” she’d tell us, the sun beating down
and the pool shining a not-natural aqua.
“Splash, splash, SPLASH.” I had a tendency to kick my legs a
little too eagerly, my feet rising above the water, making flap, flap, gurgle
noise with each hearty kick I made. Big splashes. Obnoxious splashes, really.
“Now,” our instructor would say, “Keep kicking, but gently.” She’d look at me when she said this. I eased up. “Hold the
wall”—my little fingers would grasp the edge, smooth and rubbery like a dolphin’s
side—“and I want you to talk to the magic fish.”
We all gasped. Magic
fish?
The instructor nodded. “It’s a secret,” she explained, “but
there are magic fish in this pool. They are invisible, but you can talk to them
and they will hear you.” She glanced at us, hanging on her every word. “Do you
want to know how?”
“Yes!” we all cried. My brown eyes were huge with
excitement, the water reflecting in my pupils.
“Okay,” the instructor replied, tugging at her dark curly
hair held back in a ponytail. “Watch.”
She lowered her torso and began to kick. With her fingers
still clutching the pool’s edge, the instructor put her mouth to the water,
pursed her lips and blew outwards. As if a pop can had been opened underwater,
tiny bubbles gurgled to the top. I was amazed. The instructor lifted her mouth.
“Now I’m going to listen to hear if they talk back,” she
explained.
We watched intently as she turned her head to the side,
placing her ear into the water. Her face broke into a wide smile, freckles from
the sun scattered across her nose and cheeks like cinnamon flakes. I liked her
freckles.
“I heard them!” she said, lifting her ear from the water to
stand upright next to me.
She nodded towards us, our little bodies awkwardly kicking
like puppies. “Now it’s your turn.”
Yes. I smiled.
Then I began kicking hard and fast as I gripped the pool wall. I wanted to hear
the magic fish, too.
Slowly, I put my lips to the water, just as my instructor
had done. I hesitated, then blew outwards, as if the water was blue bubble gum.
To my delight, bubbles popped up, tiny ones, dancing and bobbing. I grinned,
looking at the instructor.
“Good, Lindsay!” she said. “Now turn your head and listen to
hear if they talk back.”
Oh yes, I thought.
The best part.
I turned my head and placed my ear into the water. It felt
funny, the cold water flowing in the crevices of my ear. I listened for the
magic fish. Nothing.
Maybe I didn’t talk
long enough, I thought. I
turned my head and blew bubbles, more eagerly this time. I placed my ear back
into the water. Listened. Nothing.
I blew bubbles. Listened. Blew bubbles. Listened. And soon enough, I was breathing.
It was a great technique the instructors used, the whole
magic fish-thing. A few summers later, when my brother was listening for the
fish and I was off in the deep end with the advanced class, I knew the magic
fish weren’t real anymore. I wish I did, I often thought. I wish I believed.
But with things like that, it’s like Santa Claus. Your gut eventually speaks
loudly, and your belief switch turns off. Still, I asked my brother then if he
talked to the magic fish.
“Yes!” he claimed. I smiled.
As I got older, the St. Charles Pool inspired feelings of
excitement, nervousness and anxiety for me. It wasn’t about magic fish anymore.
It was about Tom the High School Lifeguard and swimming by his stand,
pretending to “just happen” to pop up from underwater right where he sat with
that hot dog-looking lifesaver. George Strait’s “Carrying Your Love With Me” blasted
from the pool’s gated office. I asked for that George Strait cassette tape for
my ninth birthday that fall. When I hear the song now, it takes me back to the
pool all over again. Funny how songs and smells do that.
The pool was where I sometimes saw classmates, but more
importantly, crushes. Every time my mom took us to the pool when I was older,
the butterflies would grow as I looked for my crush’s bike outside the pool
gate. If he were there, my stomach would both flip with excitement and flop
with anxiety. I needed extra bouts of Play It Cool vibes. Once I took my
required pre-pool shower and walked into the pool area wearing my favorite
bathing suit—a hot pink one-piece with a white tie-dyed heart my mom and I
picked out at Meijer—I would “nonchalantly” glance to see where my crush was.
Once I identified his location, I would actively avoid eye contact and the side
of the pool he was swimming, then pretend I never saw him. I liked him, of
course, so I avoided him. Some things never change.
The St. Charles Community Pool is closed now. I think it had
to do with money and costs to keep it open or something like that. Recently, I
drove my bike around the paved path that circles the pool. I couldn’t help but
look past the gate and see the empty concrete basin of a pool, drained and
chipped and cracked and empty. The dark forest green slide tubes, dismantled
and disconnected like broken bones. The chipped paint and the dull wood. It’s
depressing, really.
But the memories don’t fade for me, to my surprise. Even
now, almost 20 years later, when I look up at a blue sky framed with pine trees
and oak tree leaves swaying in the breeze, it takes me back to the pool. Where
I had the same vision of the sky and the trees while floating lazily on my back
in the cool water.
That’s what the pool is to me. Sunny skies and floating and
hot days. George Strait and concession stand beef jerky sticks, splashing
noises and bare feet on hot sidewalks. Magic fish and Tom the Lifeguard and
fifth grade crushes.
Since the magic fish are invisible, I’ll pretend they still
live there. In the empty basin of a pool full of memories.