I actually disagree - while the film was STRONGLY symbolic, it was clearly much more literal than Cheever's surrealistic short story.
What we see in the film could, conceivably, have occurred in one day. It's unlikely, but not impossible.
At the very least, though, there's a suggestion that he's done things like this "river of pools" before. Shirley specifically tells him that he can "swim the pool, do whatever you have to do," so she "gets" what he's up to right away.
That's why she asks him whether he'll ever "grow up" when he first tells her what he's doing. She understands his whimsies, and she knows his actual purpose (to relive happier times, HIS happier times).
Ultimately, though, I don't think it matters to the story's theme and "message" whether the film literally takes place in one day or not. It does have a sort of James-Joyce's-Ulysses feel to it, though. And that novel also crammed an epic journey into a single day.
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