Last spring, I discovered Lake Lytal Aquatic Center in West Palm Beach. It provided a great alternative to open water swimming while recovering from a partial knee replacement. For less than $4 with the senior discount I had a lane to myself, with no surf or jellyfish worries.
This year I bought a monthly pass upon arrival at the Folly in early December. "Use it at least eight times to get the full value of the discount," the young attendant told me. In yet another sign of aging, I quickly realized I was more relaxed going to the pool than swimming in the ocean, especially after experiencing a mild jellyfish sting on Christmas Day. Most of the other midday swimmers are my age or older.
During Florian's visit we got into a discussion of the pool's size after he Googled Lake Lytal. "It's Olympic-size, like Columbia," I insisted, "but two or three times as wide. He disagreed, infuriating me because that had been my understanding ever since I began swimming there regularly, after returning from Australia in 1984. Someone had told me that 72 lengths equalled a mile which I calculated was 1850 strokes so that I could ensure my ocean swims were consistent, regardless of the current.
"Artificial intelligence says that Lake Lytal IS Olympic-size, 50 meters by 25 yards," Florian read out loud. When he lived in New Jersey, I'd given him my ID card to swipe himself in at Columbia several times.
"That's ridiculous," I replied, making another mental note regarding the inadequacy of AI. "Why would a pool's dimensions mix meters and yards?"
Coincidentally, the first time I swam after his departure, the lanes had been reconfigured, reducing their number but increasing their length. When I asked a lifeguard why, he explained that college swimming season was about to begin.
"But I count my strokes," I protested. "How can I make sure that I'm swimming the same distance?"
"Not a problem," he answered. "The pool is 50 meters by 25 yards, which means you can swim half as many lengths, give or take."
Oops. I remembered something Lois had said about my father. "Hon's not always right, but he's always SURE!!!!" That apple did not fall far from the tree at all.
But I'm nothing if not adaptable, although it took a swim or two to come up with a new stroke pattern--I alternate between breast and side strokes, right and left--that equalled 3/4 of a mile. After turning 71, I reduced my workout by 25% as a birthday present due to increasing exhaustion afterward.
All this by way of background. In short, I've been a dedicated swimmer for decades, so the switch from ocean to pool swimming in Florida, and the lane reconfiguration were big deals in my life if of little interest to anyone else.
So imagine my reaction when I showed up my first Saturday morning at Lake Lytal and the woman at the admission desk warned me that a lane might not be available until noon due to college practice. I went inside anyway and noticed a swimmer with Columbia branded across the rear of his Speedo, but it didn't really register because I was too busy scanning the pool for an available lane.
Then, as I was hurriedly stripping down to claim the sole empty one, a bearded man in his mid-40s approached me.
"Hey, don't you swim at Columbia?" he asked.
"Yeah," I said.
"Like, I mean EVERY day?"
"Not everyday, but often, when I'm in New York. Why do you ask?"
"I'm the assistant swimming coach at Columbia. When you walked in, I asked the head coach if it was you and he said 'It's got to be!'"
My reaction was euphoric to say the least. We chatted briefly; he explained that Columbia's swimming team used Lake Lytal or another facility on Singer Island for three weeks every year during winter break. Who knew? And what were the chances we'd cross paths?
The coach also disabused me of the notion that Columbia's pool was Olympic-size. "That's one of the reasons the guys love to train down here. Besides the weather, of course," he said with a faint accent. When I asked where he was from originally--probably another sign of my age--he identified himself as Brazilian. He also told me the team had been improving in Ivy League competitions, which often closed the pool to alumni swimmers on weekends.
As soon as I completed my adrenalin-fueled swim, dripping wet, I called Tom, my first roommate at Columbia, figuring he of all people would appreciated the randomness of the encounter. But as a former Olympic fencer, he focused more on my dedication to swimming as the thing that led to their recognition than the elation I was feeling as a result. "Maybe there's an organization for alumni swimmers, like the Rusty Blades for fencers. They raise a lot of money for the team."
"I'm unaware of any such organization and completely uninterested in joining if there is one," I replied, as intimidated and bored by team sports as I always have been
But Chris got it immediately when I returned to the Folly, more excited than I've been all season and happy enough to have a rare cocktail before dinner that night.
"We're so used to being invisible," he observed, "that it feels great to be seen."
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