I live not ten minutes from a pristine beautiful lake with beautiful sandy beaches, a brand new gorgeous playground, and more walking trails than a person could ever hope to stroll in one day.
I avoid that place like the plague.
It’s not that it’s not beautiful, or it doesn’t hold special memories in my heart. Let’s just say many a romantic memory has been made under the full moon dancing upon the black lake, while snuggled in my Boo’s arms.
The problem with this lake, this provincial park, is I’m not the only one who knows it exists. Other people enjoy it’s long stretches of soft sand and scenic views.
Other people with squalling infants and sand-kicking demon spawn who kick dirt in your face when you are trying to relax and enjoy the sounds of the gulls and the soft lapping of water at the lake’s shore.
I admit it, I’m a wee cranky when I’m hot and I’ve got sand digging into places sand has no business digging into.
Which is why I stay home and enjoy my pool. My pool is my very private (heh) paradise. My own oasis where I’m not worried about getting sand in my whoo-ha or being forced to witness people parade around in swimsuits they have no business wearing.
Seriously. What is with old men and speedos? My retinas have burned into shriveled dry orbs more times than I care to count because of this phenomenon.
So I ignore my children’s whines and pleas to be released out into the world and force them to make do with the luxurious chemical filled lake we call our pool.
I keep telling them it doesn’t matter if all their friends get to go to the lake. They are lucky, no, blessed to be able to have a pool of their very own to swim in and not have to deal with leeches and pre-pubescent teens running around wearing itty-bitty scraps of material making arses of themselves.
I keep telling them that back in my day, I was lucky to be able to run through a rusty sprinkler when it was hot.
They don’t believe me when I tell them that my family’s pool was our bathtub and it was mighty hard to simply float in it and relax when you had your older brother pounding down the door threatening to drown you because you were screwing around in the only bathroom while he was jumping up and down trying to keep from having his bowels exploding all over the place.
Still, I want my children to be happy. I need them to be happy. Because dammit, they deserve it. They’ve been through more emotional upheaval in their short lives than most adults will ever face.
That said, I’m still not going to a public beach just to have my cooter rubbed raw and leeches chew on my boobs.
Which means I must occasionally play with my children in our pool instead of just floating around naked in it so that random neighbours can stumble upon my blindingly white body.
It was much easier when they were little and I could just spray them with the hose and they thought that was fabulous. Sigh.
Playing in the pool with them means getting jumped on, splashed at and tugged on all the while trying to pretend I’m not old and unfit, gasping and panting just trying to keep up with their seemingly boundless energy.
The upside to playing in the pool with them means that if I accidentally shove their heads under water I can pass it off as playing with them and not have them realize I’m just looking for a moment of peace and serenity.
Or a little passive-aggressive payback. Heh.
Of course, in the process of playing with them I swallowed more damn pool water than an elephant can shoot out it’s trunk. Because you know, what’s more fun than pushing your mom’s head under water and watch her choke and gasp and snort water out her nose?
Finally, two hours later, I’d had my fill of not only bonding with Fric and Frac, but water in general. There wasn’t a mommy trophy large enough or shiny enough to keep me in that pool for another minute.
Pulling myself up and out of the pool, the kids suddenly stopped splashing at one another and looked up.
“Where you going mom?” Fric whined.
I did what any graceful mother under fire would do. I lied.
“I have to go to the washroom.” (Fingers crossed behind my back.)
“Aw. You’re coming back in though, right?”
Yea. Sure. Of course, I mumbled.
Frac saw right through my weak response. (Damn it. Not to self: Learn to lie better.)
“Mom, you don’t have to go in the house to go to the bathroom. Just do what I do,” he helpfully yelled out.
“I’m not peeing in the bush, kiddo. Or off the deck. Or on the lawn. Unlike you, I have class.” Said as I was digging out my swimsuit from my ass crack.
“No mom. Just pee in the pool, like we do. It’s okay. Dad puts chlorine in it.”
I mentioned earlier how much of that pool water I swallowed earlier on, right? Um, yah.
At least the mystery of why our pool is always so uncharacteristically um, warm, has been solved.
From now on, I’m sticking to hurling water balloons at their heads when I feel the need to bond.






Neil
That is one of those things that fathers pass down to their sons — it is OK to pee in the shower, pools, and the ocean. In fact, it is a God-given right.
SoMo
That is it, woman! I have had it with all these pool posts!
Okay, maybe it is not you. Maybe it was the nice pool sales guy that gave us a nice figure of $37,000 to put paradise in our own backyard. My husband has his marching orders and assures me that in 2 years I will have my heart’s desire. Until then, I will get wishing for my pool to piss in.
One last question, how do the people who live in igloos (:P) get to have a pool, but us in hell don’t have them handed out like free candy at the bank? Just curious.
Julie
Oh Jesus…that makes me sick. That is the reason why I kinda detest warm pools….I just think of piss and that takes all the fun out of it.
*gag*
Overflowing Brain
I had a pool as a kid and yep, definitely peed in it. And as an adult, I am disgusted with myself because, ew.
And it is for this same reason that everytime I swallow ocean water, I gag violently. It’s like the world’s largest urinal.
FADKOG
I have a few rules in life.
1) Eat the last piece of cake/brownie/cookie/etc., before my kids realize there’s still some left.
2) Laugh smugly at the fighting that ensues upon completion of Rule 1 (while wiping crumbs from my face).
3) Never, but never, swim in a body of water where animals or humans pee. If I can either not see the bottom or if the water is warm, you’ll find me inside.
Sadly, I’ve stepped into my own bathroom into enough puddles of pee to realize there may be a flaw in Rule #3, but still, I’m sticking with it.
Sydney
Do you know what you should do to scare the shit out of the little buggers???
They sell tablets, you put in the pool water… And if someone pees, they turn a BRIGHT RED cloud around them, you know, where the pee is.
*snicker*
That’ll teach ‘em.
Jess
Tell them that Daddy put in a new chemical that turns the water purple if they pee in it. That’ll stop the pool pissing really fast.
Tootsie Farklepants
The pee is exactly why I avoid water parks. It’s one thing to digest my own children’s, um, evacuation. But strangers? Just thinking about it makes me all…..*faint*
Her Bad Mother
*laughing out loud at Sydney’s suggestion*
KD @ A Bit Squirrelly
We have been looking at houses and one we found has a huge yard–which of course to Caspian means we should put in a pool. My mind was pretty much made up before that no we would not, and you just solidified my decision.
Janet
But telling kids not to do that is like pissing in the wind…
Sorry, I could resist the piss tie-in.
Heather @ Desperately Seeking Sanity
Syndey’s suggestion works… one summer we KNEW this kid was peeing in the pool… so we bought the tablets and didn’t tell him…. and then… well the truth came out…
to this day, he often receives signs for Christmas that say “we don’t swim in your toilet, so please don’t pee in our pool.”
preTzel
LOL! Boys will be boys…or so I’m told.
Peeing in a pool? EEEYUCK!
MIL’s pool had a sign that said “If you feel the need to pee – LEAVE THE POOL!” LOL!
the planet of janet
ok.
ew.
Zip n Tizzy
Yum.
Touch of ammonia, a dash of salt, shake with chlorine… Smooth summer cocktail!
Dustin
Our neighborhood pool has a sign that says, “Welcome to our _ool (notice there’s no “P” in it, please keep it that way)”. I’m quite certain it does not, in fact, deter that particular behavior.
Chaos
HAHA! Peeing in the pool! My nephew got my sister with that one last month and she hasn’t set foot in her pool since.
Mrs. Schmitty
My hubby taught my boys to pee outside when one night there were no bathrooms to be found. Okay, an emergency, I get it. But when I found out that they were peeing in the back yard by the fence only feet from the house, I wanted to strangle them. Then I found out that my daughter was standing right along side of them, pissing down her leg. I strangled their father.
AZ
Several public pools in our area were closed due to cryptosporidiosis, so I guess that means they’re not just peeing in the pool.
Mr Lady
I once drank my kids vomit, but that pales in comparison. Also, Neil? I pee in the shower. Tell me it’s not only supposed to be a guy thing.