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Woman Who Can’t Swim Saves 11-Year-Old Girl from Drowning – Their Heartfelt Exchange Will Bring You to Tears

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Published On: September 13, 2025
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Bridgett Addison, who doesn't know how to swim, embraces 11-year-old Mia Garcia after saving her from drowning at a Florida park.
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Heroes don’t need capes, or even swimming lessons! 11-year-old Mia Garcia slipped into the water at Fort Myers’ Lakes Park. What happened next turned a near-tragedy into something remarkable. A bystander saw Mia struggling. This woman jumped in to help, though she admits she can’t swim a stroke. Her quick actions kept Mia afloat until others rushed over. Paramedics checked Mia at the scene. She’s fine now, shaken but unharmed. The rescuer shrugged it off later. That’s how it goes sometimes.

On September 6, around 10 a.m., Mia had been collecting shells by the water’s edge.

The young girl, who has autism, lost her footing and slipped into the lake. For most people, that might have triggered panic. But for Bridgett Addison, it meant action. “I saw her in the water,” Addison later told WBBH-TV. “So I just ran.” 

Without hesitation, she jumped in despite not knowing how to swim. Rocks scraped her skin as she fought through the water, but she reached Mia. Addison guided the child back to shore, bleeding but determined. The rescue was fueled only by instinct. 

Addison and Mia reunited soon after, and this meeting was pure joy, hope, and all things sweet.

Addison brought balloons, a stuffed animal, and most importantly, eyes that kept welling up every now and then. The two hugged each other tight, and the lady said, “I’m so happy to know you’re okay!” Enough to make a grown adult cry, eh? 

After her drowning scare, Mia had been silent for the most part, but ended up thanking Addison in a way that only a child could. She wrote a card to the lady who didn’t know how to swim, saying, “Thank you isn’t enough for what you did.”

The card also included a hand-drawn picture of the two of them holding hands and looking happy.

Addison was overcome by the sheer rush of emotion in this gesture and gave her a note as well: “I wanted you to know how very special you are. Continue being the beautiful person God has created you to be.”

What they said to each other at that moment was simple and unassuming. Still, it carried the weight of gratefulness, generosity, and the fact that a whole life was saved with no swimming skills in a random park.

Addison maintains that she is no hero, though. “I feel like if you see anybody in distress, help them,” she told WBBH-TV as she brushed off her glory. But Mia, of course, sees it differently and says: “She is a hero; she just is.” For the little child who lived all thanks to a stranger’s literal leap of faith, heroes show up when you need them the most, whether you know them personally or not. 

Usually, we see all sorts of division and despair in the headlines today.

Yet, this story from Florida shows us how heartwarming things can come from normal people doing extraordinary acts of kindness. Addison may not have stopped or thought twice about their chance of survival and ran, but that made all the difference. The child got her life back and learnt that kindness doesn’t think twice. 

NEXT UP: “We Won’t Be Silenced”—Trans Swimmer Following Ban From Women’s Category

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Sohini Sengupta

Armed with degrees in English literature and journalism, Sohini brings her insights and instincts to The Inquisitr. She has been with the publication since early 2025 and covers US politics, general news, and sometimes pop culture. Off the clock, she's either binge-watching or reading, sleeping, and educating herself. In that order!

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