Forget
the apple. Swimming three times a week keeps arthritis away.
To swim at the
Meadville YMCA, I established a smooth, two hour and forty-five
minute routine. Pack, drive,
change,
swim,
shower,
dress,
drive,
and deal
with
wet gear.
Then, two weeks ago,
Monday came.
A sign that said,
“Pool Closed Today,” greeted me at the check-in desk. My face
must have registered disappointment because Tess's welcoming smile
turned to a frown. “I'm sorry. The regulator went crazy over the
weekend and dumped extra chlorine into the pool. The malfunction
should be fixed tomorrow.”
I sighed, stuffed my
gear in a locker, and walked to exercise room behind the check-in
desk. Mounting a stationary bike, I peddled through Paris via a video
of crowded streets and views of Notre Dame Cathedral, Eiffel Tower,
and Arc de Triomphe. My knees gave out before the video ended.
Tuesday, Tess kept her
welcoming smile. “The pool's fixed. You can swim today.”
Three regulars,
Leeann, Mike, and Eva, were already exercising when I toed off my
pool shoes and walked down the steps into the water. Odor of chlorine
assaulted my nostrils. Yuck.
I had sixty lengths or two thirds of a mile to swim.
I dove under and came
up pulling my arms into a breast stroke. I pulled, breathed, thrust
and kicked.
My lips numbed.
Weird.
Fifty-two lengths to go.
I switched to a side
stroke. With my right hand, I cupped water, swished it back to my
left hand, then scissor kicked. I glimpsed Jackie, another regular
swimmer, standing in street clothes on the deck and talking to the
life guard.
Why wasn't Jackie in her suit?
Forty-two lengths to go.
Staring at the ceiling
tiles and tucking my feet toward my butt, I
drew my hands up my torso then flung my arms to the side. Kicking and
forcing my arms to my thighs, I splashed my face and zipped
through the water. The insides of my mouth and nose were as parched
as desert sand. Thank
goodness I hadn't forgotten
my goggles.
Thirty
lengths
to go.
I
pulled,
breathed,
and thrust
forward.
The
others weren't putting
their heads
under the water.
Leeann,
who marches and swishes
Styrofoam barbells, and
Mike, who only
swims
side stroke since his back
operation, never do, but
Eva usually
varies freestyle
and backstroke. Today she
doggy paddled. Maybe
they knew
something I didn't.
Eighteen
lengths
to go.
The
room
quieted letting splashes
from my elementary backstroke echo off the walls. I
stopped at the shallow end and surveyed the pool. Everyone had left.
Forget the last sixteen lengths. I'd settle for a half mile today.
I
grabbed the edge of the pool, moved
my left leg back and
set my heel on the bottom. While I stretched, I
stared at the gurgling fountain.
Was
it circulating
the maximum amount of chlorine, or
had the regulator malfunctioned again?
When I returned home, I dumped my gear into the wash tub. Suit,
shoes, bathing cap, and goggles reeked as if I'd poured a gallon of
bleach over
them.
Sheesh.
On Thursday, Tess greeted me with an even wider, welcoming smile.
“The pool's fixed. You'll have a lovely swim.”
But she'd said the pool was fixed Tuesday.
“Great,” I said exchanging my car keys for a lock to secure a
locker. “The last swim was bleachy.”
Her smile switched to a pursed lip pout.
I changed and zoomed through the smooth, odorless water as if it were
liquid silk. But when I swam between Eva and Jackie, snippets of
their conversation bothered me. “. . . such a headache . . . my
fillings felt like they were coming out . . .”
In the locker room, I fastened the hooks of my bra and asked Jackie.
“Were you talking to Eva about the chlorine Tuesday?
Is that why you didn't swim?”
“Yes. It was too high. They
closed the pool Tuesday afternoon.”
Yikes. Right after I'd left.
“How high was it?”
“You don't want to know.”
“Yes, I do.”
“No. You don't.”
Pulling my turtleneck over my head I said, “Tell me.”
“They read the indicator wrong. They thought it was six, but it
was really twelve.”
What
did the numbers mean?
I
drove home and searched Google for pool chlorine levels. Two to three
parts per million is recommended. More than three will emit an odor
and cause irritation.
Swimming
on that fated Tuesday kept more than arthritis away. I bet I'm still
germ free from my swim in bleach.
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