http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcellus_Wiley
http://www.distanceswimchallenge.com/
He was on a local radio sports show this AM talking about his journey to learn how to swim. He conveyed a story about when he was 11 years old, his friend was clowning around and hit him while they were walking by a pool. Wiley didn’t know how to swim, and thanked God that he bounced off the bottom and essentially ran his way out of the pool.
“That’s not swimming!”, said Wiley, “It’s just pure luck, and a lot these big NFL guys who can’t swim believe that if they fell in, they wouldn’t drown because they could get out of the pool, even if they can’t swim.” He stated how absolutely dangerous this mindset is…
He went on to say that when he first jumped in the pool, as an adult, to take formal swimming lessons, he realized that swimming wasn’t easy, and there is a right way and wrong way to do it. You don’t just naturally stumble on how to do it. He opined that believing otherwise could be dangerous, and get you killed.
He told the show that even after being an NFL athlete, no small feat of skill, getting in the pool made him feel like he had never done anything athletic in his whole life. He felt helpless, until he was taught the right way to swim.
Everyone believes that they know how to do something well enough, and can probably do it well enough to “get themselves out of it”, but in reality, we don’t. It’s not just swimming…
While all of his account was pretty enlightening, I couldn’t help but remember back to when I took my first self defense oriented pistol and carbine class, and feeling the exact same way as Wiley felt about his adventure with learning to swim.