Most Smartest Mommy ITW (In The World)
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This is Not a Drill
Momservation: If you can make it through childhood without stitches, breaking, fracturing, or spraining something, you didn’t have enough fun. ☺ ☺ ☺ I think right up there with the fear of coming out of the bathroom with your skirt stuck in your underwear, is a mother’s fear that her instinct was wrong and a trip to the emergency room was in order rather than a band-aid, a kiss, and instructing “just shake it off.” It’s interesting how lax you get as your children get older. When my kids were little I thought a paper cut needed stitches. Any fever I was sure was the first stage of the West Nile Virus. A rash - the reemerging of Small Pox. A bump on the head, I was waking that kid every 20 minutes and checking pupils. I’m not sure when it happened, maybe after the first set of stitches. Maybe after the dislocated elbow. Possibly after seeing my son crash his dirt bike or a giant goose-egg rise out of his forehead. But at some point I realized my kids were pretty tough. They took a lickin’ and kept on tickin’. I could keep them bubble wrapped on the couch or I could let them be kids and deal with the injuries one band-aid and kiss at a time. I can’t tell you how many times my kids have gotten hurt and I quickly evaluated and determined only a band-aid, kiss and hug, or ice was needed (it’s a well known mommy fact that band-aids, kisses and an ice pack cure almost any ailment).But in the back of my mind was always this nagging fear, left over from the overprotective early years, what if I’m wrong and this isn’t just a drill? Would I miss the signs of a real emergency? Enter my daughter, Whitney. Age 8 and thanks to her older brother, I was sure that out of my two kids, if there ever was a broken bone, it was going to be Whitney and somehow involve her overzealous brother. Well, I was right on one count. It was Whitney, but her brother had nothing to do with it. Although she said, “It was at his baseball game, so I can still blame him.” It ended up being a playground injury – she slipped off a bar and broke her fall, and her arm. At first when Whitney came up to me, not even a tear in her eye, to tell me she hurt her arm and thought it was broken, I nearly brushed it aside ready to remedy with a kiss. Especially since I was engrossed in the excitement of But after I got her some ice, thinking it was more to sooth her fear than her injury, Whitney started sobbing in pain. Way out of character. Everyone I had take a look at her arm thought it looked okay. But my mommy instinct was ringing like Spiderman’s spidey sense. We did our RICE - Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation and I got a doctor’s appointment. When I took Whitney to the doctor first thing the next morning, I had no doubt her arm was broken. I even asked her what color cast she was going to get. When the doctor delivered the confirming news, I felt a surge of validation that I got it right. I actually felt like I should’ve earned some sort of mommy badge of excellence for knowing this wasn’t just a drill and what to do in case of a real emergency. On the way out of the doctor’s I asked Whitney what she thought of being first to the finish line of broken bones. On the mend and back in usual form, a sly grin spread across her face, “Now,” she said, “My brother can’t touch me.” 3 comments from 3 users
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posted by
theurbanmom
on Jun 16, 2009 at 02:28 PM
Yeah, my brother and I used to count scars to compare who had the most. He beat me when he had to have surgery on his back...
We've dislocated, sprained and stressed things, but no broken bones in our family yet either. posted by
hmoeckli
on Jun 15, 2009 at 07:56 PM
I also thought my family had similar good luck to yours Creatress when it came to broken bones, but no. My sister cracked a bone in her foot over the weekend. The cause: walking in bad shoes and tripping. Yikes. Way to follow your instincts, Kelli and bravo to your daughter for being such a trooper! :) posted by
creatress
on Jun 15, 2009 at 10:14 AM
I remember WANTING a broken bone as a kid cause the casts were so cool! You got all the attention at school AND had something to doodle on that you couldn't get yelled at. Now, on the other side of the waiting room, I'm thrilled we haven't had one yet. In fact, no one in my family has ever broken in bone. Maybe we're just couch and bubble wrap people? I'm glad she's ok and that your "mommy sense" didn't let you down.
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