Octoplus Swim School

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SEND specialist - Neurodiverse/Autism/ADHD/AuDHD - 1:1 & 2:1 - Luxury private pools in East Kent - Highly qualified swim teacher & health/wellbeing coach - Diabetes - Women/Womxn Only - Anxiety - Depression - Alzheimer's

21/06/2026

Knowing how to react if you fall into water can make all the differ...

**The Most Radical Swimming Lesson I've Taught All Year**Last night I did something that would probably make some swimmi...
12/06/2026

**The Most Radical Swimming Lesson I've Taught All Year**

Last night I did something that would probably make some swimming teachers very uncomfortable.

For most of the lesson, I barely taught. I was silent almost the whole lesson.

Now before anyone reports me to Swim England or STA, hear me out...

I come from an academic background. I was trained to critique ideas, systems and accepted wisdom. One thing academia taught me is that just because something has always been done a certain way doesn't mean it's the best way.

So over the last couple of years I've found myself asking some uncomfortable questions about swimming teaching.

Do children really need constant instruction?

Do they need us talking all the time?

Do they need endless corrections, prompts and encouragement?

Or are we sometimes getting in the way? Last night I decided to find out.

This is a child who, eighteen months ago, wouldn't let go of me. We've spent a long time building trust, confidence and skills together.

When he arrived, I smiled, laid out equipment around the pool and stepped back.

Not unsupported. Not unsafe.

Just............space....................

Over the next hour he independently practised activities we'd worked on for months. He chose equipment. He swam lengths. He practised his breathing. He repeated drills. He switched activities. He challenged himself.

Nobody was telling him what to do; Dad and I mostly watched, smiled and occasionally looked at each other in disbelief.

The most remarkable thing wasn't his swimming.

It was his OWNERSHIP. AGENCY. CONFIDENCE.

His ability to think: "I can do this myself."

I think many of us have been taught that good teaching means making ourselves necessary. I'm beginning to wonder whether great teaching is the opposite.

Perhaps the real goal isn't to create a situation where children need us. I think it's developing children who don't.

His dad gave me a huge gift last night. He trusted me enough not to perform.

Not to prove my worth. Not to fill every silence.

And his son rewarded that trust by showing us exactly what he was capable of.

I cried tears of joy during that lesson.

Not because of how far he swam.

But because I could see a child walking into a pool and believing in himself.

And honestly?

That's worth far more than any badge.

πŸ’™ Every Child Should Come With a User Manual πŸ’™With permission from one of our OctoPLUS families, we'd like to share some...
11/06/2026

πŸ’™ Every Child Should Come With a User Manual πŸ’™

With permission from one of our OctoPLUS families, we'd like to share something special.

Recently, we found ourselves reflecting deeply on how best to support one of our swimmers. Lots of conversations were happening behind the scenes between teachers and parent. We were exploring what was working, what wasn't, and how we could adapt our approach to better meet the child's needs.

Together, we came up with a slightly unusual plan. Instead of the child coming to swimming lessons...

Mum came to learn to swim. The lesson became hers.
The child became the teacher. And honestly?

It was one of the best lessons we've had with this child.

Not because of the swimming skills that were achieved, but because everyone left feeling successful, connected and understood.

Following those conversations, Mum shared a document she had written about her child.

As I read it, I found myself tearing up and thinking:

" I wish every child should come with a user manual like this".

Not just autistic or ADHD children. Not just PDA children.

Every child.

Because what this document does so beautifully is help adults understand the child behind the behaviour.

We're sharing it exactly as Mum wrote it, because we think her words speak for themselves. I have changed the name of the child to Sam.

-----------------------------------------------------------------
About Me:

Sam is an autistic young person with a demand-avoidant profile (PDA), ADHD, dyspraxia, sensory processing differences and significant anxiety.

When Sam feels safe, understood and connected, he is capable, thoughtful, funny, curious and resilient.

When he appears avoidant, oppositional or disengaged, this is usually a sign that he is feeling overwhelmed, anxious or unsafe rather than unwilling. He has said β€œI actually want to do it, just something is stopping me from doing it and I don't know why”.

Our Approach

βœ“ Connection before correction
βœ“ Relationship before compliance
βœ“ Safety before achievement
βœ“ Curiosity before judgement
βœ“ Collaboration before control

Rather than asking:
"How do we stop this behaviour?"
we ask:
"What might Sam be telling us?"

What Helps Sam:
- Warm, calm adults
- Low-demand communication
- Genuine choices
- Processing time
- Humour
- Predictability where possible
- Being listened to
- Having an escape route when anxious
- Feeling understood rather than judged
- A sense of being on the same team

What Doesn't Help:
- Pressure
- Repeated reminders
- Being rushed
- Unexpected changes without support
- Discussions during distress
- Focus on compliance
- Comparisons with peers
- Hierarchy

Progress is not always visible through attendance, work completed or participation.

For Sam, progress may look like:
☐ He left the house voluntarily
☐ He visited a new place
☐ He spoke to a new adult
☐ He connected with someone
☐ He tolerated uncertainty
☐ He felt uncertain but did it anyway
☐ He tried something new
☐ He accepted support
☐ He spoke about his worries
☐ He allowed a conversation about education
☐ He was able to focus and listen, even briefly
☐ He recovered from distress more quickly
☐ He talked about the future

Please look beyond outcomes and consider:
- How much courage did this take?
- What barriers did Sam overcome?
- What strengths did he show?
- What support helped him succeed?
- What can we learn from today?

Every positive interaction matters.

We are not trying to make Sam fit into the world.

We are helping him build the confidence, safety and trust he needs to engage with it.

The relationship is the intervention.
-----------------------------------------------------------------

The relationship is the intervention. I want to just repeat that and let it sink in.

Reading this reminded us that progress isn't always measured in metres swum, badges achieved or skills mastered.

Sometimes progress looks like:

πŸ’™ Getting into the car.

πŸ’™ Walking through the door.

πŸ’™ Entering the pool area.

πŸ’™ Giving something a go.

πŸ’™ Recovering more quickly after a difficult moment.

πŸ’™ Feeling safe enough to come back next week.

As swim teachers, we often get just 30 minutes a week with a child. Parents hold years of knowledge.

When we work together, sharing observations, ideas, concerns and successes, incredible things can happen.

So here's a question for families:

If your child came with a user manual, what would it say?

What helps them thrive?

What makes life harder?

What does success look like for them?

And perhaps most importantly...

Who are they when they feel safe?

Thank you to this wonderful family for allowing us to share their words and helping us all learn a little more about seeing the child before the challenge.

πŸ’™πŸ™

πŸ’™ World Autism Awareness Day  - where blue is the colour of awareness πŸ’™And for us at OctoPLUS where our lessons are more...
02/04/2026

πŸ’™ World Autism Awareness Day - where blue is the colour of awareness πŸ’™

And for us at OctoPLUS where our lessons are more therapy than technique...
blue has always meant something more.

The colour of water.
The colour of calm.
The feeling a parent might be feeling after another tough day.

Let's be honest.
Raising awareness isn’t what’s missing anymore.

What isn’t always seen…
is YOU.

The parent behind it all.

So today, S.E.N looks like this:

S β€” Superhuman
Not in big moments,
but in the quiet ones β€”
getting out the door,
holding it together,
showing up… again, and again.

E β€” Endless Energy
The advocating.
The researching.
The explaining β€” on repeat.
Giving everything,
even when there’s nothing left.

N β€” Navigation
Of systems that don’t fit.
Of emotions that run deep.
Of a world that doesn’t always understand β€”
yet still…
you find a way through.

Every. Single. Day.

πŸ’™

This is what we see.

The tired smiles.
The β€œwe nearly didn’t make it today”…
but you came anyway.

The trust you place in us
standing poolside.

And in the water where, for a moment... things feel lighter.

Calmer. Safer. Possible.

Because this was never just about swimming.

It’s about connection.
It’s about regulation.
It’s about creating space.....
for both child and parent....to breathe.

πŸ’™

So today....less arbitrary awareness.

More recognition.

Parent - We see you and We respect you.
And we’re right here with you...
every step, every splash, every small win. πŸ’™

Address

Frith Farm House
Faversham
ME130DD

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