03/23/2026
How do I create mermaids? 🧜♀️✨
Every strong, confident little swimmer starts as a beginner — and just like a mermaid’s journey, it begins with learning to feel safe, calm, and at home in the water.
Many parents ask, “Will my keiki hate swim lessons?”
The truth is, in the beginning it can feel new and unfamiliar. A few tears can happen — and that’s okay. This is part of a gentle, guided process of exposure learning, where your child learns how to safely experience the water, control their breath, and build confidence day by day.
They don’t become mermaids overnight… we nurture them 🐚
Real water confidence comes from actually feeling the water — not floating above it. That’s why we avoid puddle jumpers, which keep children in a vertical “drowning posture” and prevent them from learning how their bodies truly move in the water.
Instead, we teach keiki to trust their own buoyancy in the water 🌊
If you are considering ISR we can begin this journey at home:
• During bath or shower time, allow water to gently run down your child’s face without immediately wiping it away. This helps them become more comfortable and relaxed with the sensation.
• For back float acclimation, gently support your keiki on their back and encourage them to rest with their ears in the water. Stay within arm’s reach at all times, whether in the bath or pool, and by creating a safe and calm environment to explore floating.
These small, consistent moments are how little ones begin to transform…
✨ From uncertainty → to confidence
✨ From fear → to calm
✨ From beginner → to mermaid 🧜♂️
My goal isn’t just to make swimming “fun” right away — it’s to give your keiki life-saving skills, independent skills, and a true love for the water that lasts a lifetime.
Because one day, when they fall in…
they won’t panic — they’ll float, breathe, and swim.
And that’s when you’ll see it…
your keiki has become a mermaid 💙
Mahalo for trusting me in the process 🌊🤍
Aunty Cristine
(Mother of 🧜🏻♀️ Mermaids)