06/03/2026
I WASN’T SWIMMING IN YOUR POOL.
I WAS CIRCLING A WALL I COULD NOT CLIMB.
You saw me near the blue water.
Small.
Dark.
Moving slowly along the edge.
Maybe you thought I liked it there.
Maybe you thought I had chosen your pool like it was a pond.
Maybe you waited for me to “find my way out.”
But I was not swimming.
I was trapped.
I am a toad.
My body is made for damp grass, garden soil, leaves, night air, and insects under porch lights.
Not smooth tile.
Not chlorine.
Not a deep blue wall with no root, rock, mud, or branch to hold.
I kept circling because every wild body searches for an edge that makes sense.
But your pool had no shore.
The water touched my skin.
The chemicals touched my skin.
My strength ran out one circle at a time.
Please do not leave me for morning.
Use a pool net, bucket, or container to lift me out gently.
Place me in a shaded, damp spot away from the pool.
Check the skimmer basket before turning the pump on.
And please give the next small life a way out.
A floating escape ramp.
A rough board.
A rope along the edge.
A pool cover when the pool is not in use.
Because I was not enjoying your backyard.
I was drowning quietly
beside a wall that looked like water
but had no way back to land.
Backyard pools can be deadly for wildlife because animals may fall in or mistake them for natural water, then be unable to climb out over steep, smooth sides. Humane World recommends escape devices such as FrogLog or Skamper-Ramp, and PETA also suggests ramps, ropes near the waterline, pool covers, and fencing to reduce drownings.