by
LaVerne Thompson
I
took my girls to the beach for a few days of rest and relaxation before they
disappear for their internships this summer and before my oldest goes off to
college orientation and then off to college. Well the few days turned out to be
anything but relaxing.
While
we were there the weather was absolutely beautiful, hot but with a breeze on the
beach to cool you off perfectly. But the first full day on the beach, about halfway
through our fun in the sun, we heard the shrill whistle of the lifeguard. I sat
up as did my girls and we looked toward the water. At first we couldn’t see
what the fuss was about and glanced back at the lifeguard who was frantically
waving her arms for the swimmers to come back in. That whistle and those hand
motions will become commonplace over the course of our stay, along with the
cries of HELP HELP WE NEED HELP OVER HERE! In two days we witnessed 4 separate
rescues. One involved a father and his 5 year old, and another rescue required
4 lifeguards to jump into the water.
The
scary thing was these folks didn’t get caught in riptides, oh no, but the
illusion of safety that sandbars out in the water place on our psyche. When
swimming we’ve always been told 2 things that stuck with me: check to see if
anyone else is as far out in the water as you are, and the second turned out to
be the most important, check your distance from shore. If you can’t swim it
don’t do it.
There
was a sandbar pretty far out into the water so if you were in certain areas you
could walk from the beach right out into what should have been deep water, but
instead was only waist high. Unfortunately in some areas that sandbar dropped
suddenly and the inexperienced found themselves literally in way over their heads.
So
now I need a vacation to get over the last one. Perhaps back to the ocean
albeit a different place. But no matter the body of water I will respect the
sea.
LaVerne
Thompson
Aka
Ursula
Sinclair
Sea Bride- Children of The Waves
For 200 some years Xavior, a child of the
waves, has searched the seven depths for his bride only to find her on land.
How could a landwalker be his Queen, the one destined to stop the wars among
the sea tribes? But one touch and he knew he'd defy Poseidon himself to make
her his.
Cori Daniels hated the water; she'd been on board the luxury ocean liner for 2 days and hadn't left her cabin. But when she finally ventured on deck she met a man who looked like a sea god and tempted her like no other. But he tempted her to follow him into the sea.
Cori Daniels hated the water; she'd been on board the luxury ocean liner for 2 days and hadn't left her cabin. But when she finally ventured on deck she met a man who looked like a sea god and tempted her like no other. But he tempted her to follow him into the sea.
8 comments:
Thanks for letting me blog guys. lol
I finished my trailer too late to add to the article but here it is. Enjoy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJf94yEQYJE
Okay, girl. You guys had a harrowing experience. Nothing like that show, oh shoot, the name escapes me. But you know it. LOL!
Your Children of the Waves book fits right in. Any correlation? Can’t wait to read it. And congrats on its debut!
Thanks Stephanie! I"m excited about this one.
I'd love to check this out. Congratulations!
Thanks Chaeya!
Oh my goodness, LaVerne!! You definitely need another holiday...maybe a lake next time?
The sea - so lovely and so treacherous. When you see incidents like that, it makes you even more careful!!
Good luck with the book!!!
Thank you Samantha and not a bad idea!
Hi Barbara and you are so right about the sea. And thank you.
Post a Comment