<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#">
    <channel>
        <title>This is Not a Drill - Most Smartest Mommy ITW (In The World) - kellimwheeler&apos;s Blog - SacMomsClub.com</title>
        <link>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147</link>
        <description>Momservation: If you can make it through childhood without stitches, breaking, fracturing, or spraining something, you didn&amp;rsquo;t have enough fun.
&amp;nbsp;
☺&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; ☺&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; ☺
&amp;nbsp;
I think right up there with the fear of coming out of the bathroom with your skirt stuck in your underwear, is a mother&amp;rsquo;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 &amp;ldquo;just shake it off.&amp;rdquo; 
&amp;nbsp;
It&amp;rsquo;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.
&amp;nbsp;
I&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo; and kept on tickin&amp;rsquo;. 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. 
&amp;nbsp;
I can&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo;m wrong and this isn&amp;rsquo;t just a drill? Would I miss the signs of a real emergency?
&amp;nbsp;
Enter my daughter, Whitney. Age 8 and thanks to her older brother, Logan, tough as nails. Those two play like puppies and in the ensuing rough-housing Whitney has lost two teeth, gotten two stitches, dislocated her elbow and had countless other injuries all in the name of a little fun.
&amp;nbsp;
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.
&amp;nbsp;
Well, I was right on one count. It was Whitney, but her brother had nothing to do with it. Although she said, &amp;ldquo;It was at his baseball game, so I can still blame him.&amp;rdquo;
&amp;nbsp;
It ended up being a playground injury &amp;ndash; she slipped off a bar and broke her fall, and her arm.
&amp;nbsp;
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 Logan&amp;rsquo;s championship game. No tears, no big deal.
&amp;nbsp;
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&amp;rsquo;s spidey sense. We did our RICE - Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation and I got a doctor&amp;rsquo;s appointment.
&amp;nbsp;
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&amp;rsquo;ve earned some sort of mommy badge of excellence for knowing this wasn&amp;rsquo;t just a drill and what to do in case of a real emergency. 
&amp;nbsp;
On the way out of the doctor&amp;rsquo;s I asked Whitney what she thought of being first to the finish line of broken bones. 
&amp;nbsp;
On the mend and back in usual form, a sly grin spread across her face, &amp;ldquo;Now,&amp;rdquo; she said, &amp;ldquo;My brother can&amp;rsquo;t touch me.&amp;rdquo;</description>
        <itunes:summary>Momservation: If you can make it through childhood without stitches, breaking, fracturing, or spraining something, you didn&amp;rsquo;t have enough fun.
&amp;nbsp;
☺&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; ☺&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; ☺
&amp;nbsp;
I think right up there with the fear of coming out of the bathroom with your skirt stuck in your underwear, is a mother&amp;rsquo;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 &amp;ldquo;just shake it off.&amp;rdquo; 
&amp;nbsp;
It&amp;rsquo;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.
&amp;nbsp;
I&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo; and kept on tickin&amp;rsquo;. 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. 
&amp;nbsp;
I can&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo;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&amp;rsquo;m wrong and this isn&amp;rsquo;t just a drill? Would I miss the signs of a real emergency?
&amp;nbsp;
Enter my daughter, Whitney. Age 8 and thanks to her older brother, Logan, tough as nails. Those two play like puppies and in the ensuing rough-housing Whitney has lost two teeth, gotten two stitches, dislocated her elbow and had countless other injuries all in the name of a little fun.
&amp;nbsp;
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.
&amp;nbsp;
Well, I was right on one count. It was Whitney, but her brother had nothing to do with it. Although she said, &amp;ldquo;It was at his baseball game, so I can still blame him.&amp;rdquo;
&amp;nbsp;
It ended up being a playground injury &amp;ndash; she slipped off a bar and broke her fall, and her arm.
&amp;nbsp;
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 Logan&amp;rsquo;s championship game. No tears, no big deal.
&amp;nbsp;
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&amp;rsquo;s spidey sense. We did our RICE - Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation and I got a doctor&amp;rsquo;s appointment.
&amp;nbsp;
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&amp;rsquo;ve earned some sort of mommy badge of excellence for knowing this wasn&amp;rsquo;t just a drill and what to do in case of a real emergency. 
&amp;nbsp;
On the way out of the doctor&amp;rsquo;s I asked Whitney what she thought of being first to the finish line of broken bones. 
&amp;nbsp;
On the mend and back in usual form, a sly grin spread across her face, &amp;ldquo;Now,&amp;rdquo; she said, &amp;ldquo;My brother can&amp;rsquo;t touch me.&amp;rdquo;</itunes:summary>
        <language>en-us</language>

                
                    <item>
                <title>Jun 15,  2009 at 10:06 AM : I remember WANTING a...</title>
                <description>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&#039;t get yelled at. Now, on the other side of the waiting room, I&#039;m thrilled we haven&#039;t had one yet. In fact, no one in my family has ever broken in bone. Maybe we&#039;re just couch and bubble wrap people?
I&#039;m glad she&#039;s ok and that your &amp;quot;mommy sense&amp;quot; didn&#039;t let you down.</description>
                <link>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84575</link>
                <guid>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84575</guid>
                <itunes:summary>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&#039;t get yelled at. Now, on the other side of the waiting room, I&#039;m thrilled we haven&#039;t had one yet. In fact, no one in my family has ever broken in bone. Maybe we&#039;re just couch and bubble wrap people?
I&#039;m glad she&#039;s ok and that your &amp;quot;mommy sense&amp;quot; didn&#039;t let you down.</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>Jun 15,  2009 at 07:06 PM : I also thought I...</title>
                <description>I also thought I wanted a cast as a kid, but then I GOT RUN OVER BY A VAN at age nine and had a cast/splint for the entirety of spring vacation. No broken bones, but I did have some water on my knee. And I felt like a moron.

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! :)</description>
                <link>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84577</link>
                <guid>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84577</guid>
                <itunes:summary>I also thought I wanted a cast as a kid, but then I GOT RUN OVER BY A VAN at age nine and had a cast/splint for the entirety of spring vacation. No broken bones, but I did have some water on my knee. And I felt like a moron.

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! :)</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>Jun 16,  2009 at 02:06 PM : Yeah, my brother and I...</title>
                <description>Yeah, my brother and I used to count scars to compare who had the most.&amp;nbsp; He beat me when he had to have surgery on his back...

We&#039;ve dislocated, sprained and stressed things, but no broken bones in our family yet either.</description>
                <link>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84590</link>
                <guid>http://www.sacmomsclub.com/home/Blog/kellimwheeler/10147/#c_84590</guid>
                <itunes:summary>Yeah, my brother and I used to count scars to compare who had the most.&amp;nbsp; He beat me when he had to have surgery on his back...

We&#039;ve dislocated, sprained and stressed things, but no broken bones in our family yet either.</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
            </channel>
</rss>