From Fear to Freedom: How the Y Helped Cazden Find Confidence in the Water and Beyond

Cazden smiling in the pool during swim lessons at the YMCA of Reading and Berks County

For 10-year-old Cazden, even stepping into a pool once meant uncertainty. The deep end was out of the question. Going underwater? Unthinkable. Like many children on the autism spectrum, new environments and unfamiliar sensations can feel overwhelming, especially something as unpredictable as water. 

But what made it even harder wasn’t just fear. It was access. 

“There were places that didn’t want to work with him,” his mom, Lisa, shares quietly. “Sometimes with kids on the spectrum… people just don’t know how.” 

Lisa has been raising Cazden since birth, officially adopting him just before he turned two. She knows his strengths: his incredible intelligence, his attention to detail, his love of building intricate LEGO worlds filled with dinosaurs or space stations, and his imagination. She also knows his challenges like his social hesitations, sensory sensitivities, and a tendency to keep to himself. 

But she also knew one thing for certain: Cazden loved the water.  And loving the water without knowing how to swim? That’s not just a gap, it’s a risk. So Lisa started searching. One call at a time. One “maybe” after another.  Until she found the YMCA of Reading & Berks County. 

A Different Kind of Welcome 

From the very first conversation, things felt different. Instead of hesitation, there was openness. Instead of uncertainty, there was a plan.  

Lisa was connected with Rebecca, a swim instructor who didn’t just teach strokes, she understood people. They started with a one-on-one meeting. No pressure. No assumptions. Just listening. 

And that’s where everything changed. 

“Rebecca is amazing,” Lisa says. “She understands his personality. His quirks. She gives him space, but she knows how to reach him.” That balance, patience and encouragement, structure and flexibility created something Cazden hadn’t experienced before: Comfort.

Small Steps, Big Breakthroughs 

At the beginning, progress looked simple. Learning to float. Getting his face in the water. Trusting the feeling of letting go. 

But over time, those small steps turned into something bigger.  Cazden learned how to swim the length of the pool. Then back again. Then he started diving. 

Today, he’s doing twists and turns in the water—the kind you’d expect from a confident swimmer, not a child who once refused to go underwater. 

But the biggest transformation isn’t what you can see. It’s how he feels. “His confidence… it’s completely different,” Lisa says. “Before, he wouldn’t even jump in. Now, he just goes.” 

That confidence doesn’t stay in the pool, it follows him everywhere. 

Finding His Place 

Outside of the water, Cazden has always tended to keep to himself. A quiet observer. A builder. A thinker. But something unexpected happened at the Y. 

“In the water, he talks to everyone,” Lisa says, smiling. “He talks to the other kids. He even tries to help them.”

The same child who once stood on the sidelines is now being invited in, by peers who call out, “Come join us!” 

And for the first time, he does. That shift, from isolation to connection, is something no curriculum can force. It happens when a child feels safe. Seen. Capable. 

That’s what the Y created for him.