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Water Safety Month: What Every Parent Needs to Know Before It’s Too Late

Melissa Hull

Photo courtesy of Melissa Hull

After losing her young son to drowning, Melissa Hull shares life-saving water safety tips and guidance for parents navigating unimaginable loss.

May is National Water Safety Month,

making it an excellent time to raise awareness on how parents can help keep their kids safer around water. While people have fun in the pools, lakes, and oceans, a percentage of them will experience unimaginable loss due to drowning. One grief expert who knows first-hand what losing a child to drowning is like is speaking up to help keep kids safer around water, and helping parents learn how to handle the grief and guilt if their child drowns.

“I want to first help give parents the information they need to keep their kids safer around water this summer, as well as a year-long,” said Melissa Hull, Certified Heart-Centered Grief & Bereavement Specialist, speaker, and author of “DearDrew: Creating a Life Bigger Than Grief. “I also want to help those who have experienced loss to work through the grief and be able to still have a meaningful life.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), drowning is the leading cause of death for children ages 1-4, and it is the second leading cause of death for children ages 5-14. Each year in the country there are over 4,000 unintentional drowning deaths.

Hull knows all too well about the dangers of drowning,

and the grief that follows for those parents who lose a child to it. She lost her four-year-old son, Drew, to drowning, and it left her consumed with grief and guilt. Through the feelings that gripped her following the incident, she came to realize that grief isn’t something you “get over.” Rather, it is something that one moves forward carrying with them. Through her experience, she realized that healing is a choice that requires active participation.

With that realization, she picked up the pieces of her life and intentionally moved forward, working through the grief. By helping herself to be able to live a meaningful life again after the tragedy, she set out on a mission to help others do the same. While her child died from drowning, there are thousands of parents each year who lose their child to other causes. The CDC reports that annually, there are over 3,800 deaths of children ages 1-4 and nearly 6,000 deaths of children ages 5-14.

Whether living near a beach or vacationing near one,

it’s crucial to be aware of rip currents, which according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is the cause of around 100 deaths per year on the country’s beaches. Rip currents, they explain, form as incoming waves that push water toward the shoreline, which creates an imbalance of water piling up in the surf. They report that rip currents are often referred to as drowning machines by lifeguards, as they are the leading cause of rescues for people in the surf.  They can occur on any beach with breaking waves, including the Great Lakes. If caught in a rip current it is important to stay calm and swim parallel to the shore to get out of it. If someone on shore spots someone stuck in a rip current, they should remain calm, and get a lifeguard, or call for emergency assistance.

Hull’s book has been hailed for her ability to share the raw experience of losing a child, along with the compassionate tools that parents need to be able to still live a life of meaning after their loss. She helps parents be able to move forward with the grief, reminding them that love and loss are possible. She uses a combined approach to healing that is holistic, personalized, and rooted in purpose, meaning, and resilience.

She reminds parents of the importance of practicing water safety all year long by keeping these tips in mind:

“My mission is to help raise water safety awareness and to help parents who have experienced loss to still be able to live fully,” said Hull. “Grief will always have its moments, but it does not have the final word. Grief and joy can coexist.”

Hull is not only a grief expert, but she is also a guide for fully living after loss. Her work integrates meditation and spiritual connection, energy work and Reiki, somatic and grounding practices, emotional processing and mindset work, and Dr. David R. Hawkins’ Map of Consciousness. She focuses on helping people who have experienced loss to build a life that is bigger than grief by incorporating what actually helps people  move forward with it. She is also a speaker who shares her story and what she’s learned about living a full life with grief. To get more information, visit her site at: https://www.melissahull.com/. Her book is available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Target, and other major retailers.

About Melissa Hull

Melissa Hull is an international speaker, award-winning humanitarian, and global voice in grief, healing, and personal transformation. She helps individuals navigate loss and rebuild lives rooted in purpose, meaning, and resilience, guiding them to live fully after loss. With over 20 years of experience, Hull combines lived insight with tools such as meditation and energy healing to support emotional restoration and growth. She is the author of Dear Drew: Creating a Life Bigger Than Grief and offers a range of resources through her platform, including a comprehensive online library, the Greater Than Grief self-study program, and a free gratitude journal. Her book is available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Target, and other major retailers.To get more information, visit the website at: https://www.melissahull.com/

Sources:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Drowning Data. January 2026.https://www.cdc.gov/drowning/data-research/index.html

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Child Health. February 2026. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/child-health.htm

Stop Drowning Now. Drowning Statistics. https://www.stopdrowningnow.org/drowning-statistics

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Rip Currents. September 2024. https://www.noaa.gov/jetstream/ocean/rip-currents

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