A few days ago, our new neighbor came over, clearly upset. She told us to stop using our pool because, in her words, “You’re upsetting my daughter.” I was stunned. We’d just moved in a few months earlier, and I thought we were being friendly — waving hello, offering to share baked goods, all the usual things neighbors do.
I brushed it off, thinking maybe she was just being dramatic. But yesterday, while I was out swimming, I noticed her little girl standing by the fence, watching me. She couldn’t have been more than eight or nine. She waved shyly, so I waved back — and that’s when I noticed something odd.
She was holding a small notebook and kept pointing to it, trying to get my attention. I got out of the pool and walked closer. She opened the notebook and held it up. On the page, in shaky handwriting, were the words: “I’m not allowed to swim. Please tell my mom I’m okay.”
My stomach dropped. Before I could even react, the girl’s mother rushed out, grabbed her by the arm, and dragged her back inside.
That night, I couldn’t stop thinking about it. The next day, I saw the girl sitting by her window, her eyes red and swollen. Something in me broke. I called child services — I had to.
It turns out, the girl had a near-drowning accident years ago, and her mother had become obsessively fearful, refusing to let her near water ever again. The child had been begging for months just to swim, to feel normal again.
When officials came to speak with her mom, she broke down crying, admitting she thought she was “protecting” her daughter.
Now, with therapy and supervised lessons, the little girl is finally learning to swim again — and every time she’s in the water, she waves at me from across the fence with the biggest smile I’ve ever seen.