I can understand your pain - I had ear surgery when I was young causing the same kind of pain with water you describe. But they also gave me some sort of plastic ear covers that I could put on when I went for a swim. They were molded after my ears so they fit perfectlyPhasmal said:I can't swim, but I can ride a bike.
I was born with a perforated eardrum that never really healed (I had an operation to fix it when I was 11), so putting my head under water caused me a lot of pain. Because of this, I always stayed in the shallow end.
A few times I'd end up underwater anyway and it would hurt like someone pouring acid into your brain. Like, a kid held my head underwater in the ocean once on a school trip, only for a few seconds but it was enough. Another time I was at a friend's birthday pool party and I was sitting on a little float and someone who didn't know about my ear pushed it over. Because of all that I got incredibly stressed around water when I was a kid. We did try earplugs but they kept falling out.
Oh yeah, and I very nearly drowned one time because my mum was off with my sister doing something and me and my sister went into the deep end and then they turned the waves on and I lost my grip on the side of the pool and went under. So generally water is not my friend.
I never had any trouble riding a bike. I used to go everywhere on my bike.
Damn, I want another bike.
I may learn to swim, but I may not. It's not really a massive thing in my life, so I'm always surprised how shocked people get when I say I can't swim.
Ah, another Dutch voiced the same thing ;DHagi said:Being Dutch, I can naturally do both.
I don't think there's a single Dutch child, without a serious medical condition, that does not learn these things.
On top of that basically everyone owns a bike at all times here.
Half our country is beneath the ocean, some schools even make swimming lessons mandatory at your primary school (age 4-12).Helmholtz Watson said:wait, why does Dutch=great at swimming and riding a bike?Hagi said:Being Dutch, I can naturally do both.
I don't think there's a single Dutch child, without a serious medical condition, that does not learn these things.
On top of that basically everyone owns a bike at all times here.
OP:I like to work out, so naturally I can do both.![]()
Maybe not directly great. But at the very least competent.Helmholtz Watson said:wait, why does Dutch=great at swimming and riding a bike?Hagi said:Being Dutch, I can naturally do both.
I don't think there's a single Dutch child, without a serious medical condition, that does not learn these things.
On top of that basically everyone owns a bike at all times here.
OP:I like to work out, so naturally I can do both.![]()
After reading this I could only think of the one superhero you could possibly be....Goofguy said:I can do both so that makes me some sort of superhero right? Means I can rescue anyone at land or sea.
Ok, that makes sense now. Perhaps the US should be like the Netherlands and bikes should become more popular over here so we can solve our obesity epidemic.Hagi said:Maybe not directly great. But at the very least competent.
It's our culture really. Swimming lessons are mandatory in primary school, at least they were, so pretty much every child learns how to swim. Probably on account of half our country being below sea level and all. Not to mention that our country is riddled with rivers, most of our big cities are build next to one.
And, likely due to the relatively small size of our country, bikes are a very dependable way of transportation. Everyone grew up having a bike, so they make sure their kids have them as well. And by the time kids reach high school they're usually no longer picked up by parents so they need a bike to get to and from school, with the exception of special buses for handicapped children I don't think we have school buses.
One thing you always hear foreigners remarking on after having visited the Netherlands is that there are freaking bicycles EVERYWHERE.