Maley Swim School

Maley Swim School Classes for infants thru adults are year-round at our indoor facility. Visit our website to enroll!
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06/13/2026

Have you ever heard of inattention blindness? its one of many phenomenons that can contribute to this problem.

Inattention blindness is a psychological phenomenon where you fail to notice a fully visible, unexpected object or event simply because your attention is focused elsewhere. It is not a visual defect, but rather a limitation of selective attention. In crowded environments, it can be hard to spot drowning or struggling even when its right in front of you.

Here are some others you may want to know:

"The Watcher" Effect: In a crowded environment, many parents rely on the "others are watching" rule or the presence of lifeguards. This diffusion of responsibility often results in distracted or relaxed supervision.

The Illusion of Play: Drowning doesn't always look like splashing or yelling. A struggling swimmer often slips quietly beneath the surface. Their movements can easily be mistaken for normal, playful bobbing, preventing bystanders or lifeguards from noticing.

Blind Spots: Crowds, floaties, and other swimmers can obstruct the view of lifeguards and parents, allowing a swimmer to slip underwater unobserved.

To prevent this from happening, make sure your child learns the skills they need to survive in water, and stay close to them at all times!

06/05/2026

Unpopular Opinion: Flotation Devices Aren't a Substitute for Swim Skills.

Recently, I have been getting emails and messages from parents telling us that they understand why they shouldn’t use a puddle jumper, and asking if they can use a life jacket instead.

Here's how we really feel about flotation devices:

When it comes to drowning prevention, there are no shortcuts. Unfortunately, the life jackets are going to teach your children the same thing that puddle jumpers do if you use them all of the time when in the pool.

They will still make your child think that they can float on their own, when they really can’t.

They will still teach your child to arch their head when swimming, which pulls their legs down and gets them into that vertical position ... the drowning position.

They will still teach your child to tread water, not swim.

They will still teach your child to bicycle their arms and legs in the water, which will only exhaust them, not get them moving to safety.

They will still teach your child that its ok to be independent in the water when they aren’t actually ready for that, and this right here is the thing that will convince them to go back to water without you and without the device.

Flotation devices like life vests are not and were never meant to be used to allow your child independence in the water. They are not and were never meant to help them learn to swim.
They were developed to be worn around open water, in case of a sudden and accidental fall into the water. That’s it. Not for pools, not for recreational swimming, not for allowing independence or helping parents with multiple kids manage all of them in the pool.

So if you want to protect your kids in open water, coast guard approved life vests are the way to go! But we have normalized using these devices all of the time and everywhere and it’s causing our kids to drown.

We have to change that. We have to normalize and standardize skilling kids in the water: Teaching them how to float on their backs on their own. Teaching them to propel through the water. Teaching them how to get out of the water.

Think skills, not flotation.

05/09/2026

⚠️ Boys are at a higher risk for drowning than girls—and the difference is significant.
Studies show that boys account for a majority of drowning incidents across childhood and adolescence, especially in open water.

Why?
• More frequent water exposure
• Higher-risk behavior and overconfidence
• Less consistent supervision in certain settings

💡 But here’s the most important part: this is preventable.
Swim lessons, life jacket use, and active supervision all reduce risk dramatically.
🛟 Water safety isn’t about fear—it’s about preparation.

05/05/2026
05/05/2026
05/05/2026

Lifeguards Are Not Babysitters!

Lifeguards are trained to respond in emergencies—but they should never be your child’s only line of defense at the pool.

Drowning can happen in seconds, and even the most attentive lifeguard can’t watch every child every second—especially in crowded or chaotic environments.

Parents and caregivers must stay within arm’s reach of young or inexperienced swimmers at all times. Active supervision saves lives.

Let’s work together to keep our kids safe.

Remember this: If it's play time in the water for them, it's work time for you. If you want to relax in or around the water, designate a day when you can go without them. If they are there, you are on the clock and watching at all times.

05/02/2026

Most drownings don’t happen during swim time. ❤️‍🩹

They happen during the in-between.
The “I thought someone was watching” moments.

The quick distractions. The unlocked doors. The silent slips outside.
No suits. No plan. No warning.

This is why layers matter:
✔️ Constant, active supervision
✔️ Locked doors + pool barriers
✔️ Alarms that alert, not assume
✔️ Water competency for every child

Drowning doesn’t wait for permission.
And it doesn’t need a scheduled swim.
Stay ready—even when it’s not “swim time.”

04/29/2026

Every year, we hear about people drowning after trying to save someone else who was in trouble in the water.

Here is what happens:

The person who is attempting a rescue can swim, so they think they can save the drowning person. What they don't know, until it's too late, is that when someone is actively struggling to reach the surface for air, they go into fight or flight mode, and if something or someone is near them, they will grab onto them and try to pull up, in a desperate attempt to get air.

What ends up happening? Both people drown.

That's why when lifeguards rescue, they do so using a device between them and the victim or using a special hold from behind that will prevent the victim from pulling them under the water too.

When we go into schools, we teach the kids never to go in the water and try to rescue their friends by swimming to them and helping them out of the water with their arms.

Instead, we teach them to "Reach or Throw, Don't Go":

1) Yell for help
2) Find something that you can reach the victim with, if you are close enough. Take that thing-a pool noodle, pole, branch, or rope, and go to the edge of the water. Lie on your belly to prevent you from being pulled into the water while attempting to help. Then reach the object to the person and pull them in.
3) If there is nothing that can reach them, find something that floats (a lifebuoy, life jacket, even an emptied out ice chest will work) and throw it to them.
4) Find an adult to help or call 911.

We encourage you to teach your kids to do this. It is human instinct to try to go straight to the person in trouble. But we are not trained to do this safely, so don't try it!

Make sure your whole family knows what to do if they were ever to see someone in trouble in the water.

Teach them "Reach or Throw, but don't Go"!

Address

501 Lake Harbour Drive
Ridgeland, MS
39157

Opening Hours

Monday 3pm - 7pm
Tuesday 3pm - 7pm
Wednesday 3pm - 7pm
Thursday 3:35pm - 7:45pm
Saturday 9am - 1:30pm

Telephone

+16018987946

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