Accidents

My little girl is covered in bruises and scratches, just as I was when I was a kid, and for many of the same reasons … primarily climbing trees and kissing cats.  I remember Mama always being horrified because I went to church black and blue and sometimes bloodied.  This picture was taken yesterday after my girl slipped and fell so hard her gums fuzed into her braces.  (That’s a cat scratch on her cheek she received after doling out one too many kisses.)  One of my earliest memories is of drinking my mother’s bottle of Avon Skin So Soft when I was four.  That was back before they had “childproof” caps.  I remember it because of the charcoal they gave me to throw it all up.  My little one was just four when she had to have both an endoscopy and a colonoscopy, and I recall feeling helpless as I watched her vomit.  When I was in kindergarten I completely severed a finger on my left hand just above the knuckle.  For the record it continued to grow normally even though I’d held it in my other hand separately for over five hours.  When my girl was in kindergarten she fell off the “monkey bars” at school and wound up having to have surgery.  She also had two rather large screws which protruded outside of her cast that pinned her elbow together at the growth plate.  I can still remember cracking my forehead on the corner of Daddy’s desk and hitting an artery — so blood shot out for feet in every direction but not one drop hit my face.  When my little one had to have eye surgery she involuntarily emitted tears of blood.  My beautiful mother was a red-head, and in the 1970s folks thought you were nuts if you said you required careful handling with anesthesia.  Mama fell and broke her hip and her femur bone when she was in her ’70s.  I tried SO HARD to warn them about the anesthesia; my little mother was placed in intensive care for DAYS after that surgery.  The hospital wing she was in was circular with pods that looked liked something out of Star Trek.  When my child had another surgery, an anesthesiologist dismissed my concerns that she’d inherited my mother’s red-headed genes even though she has auburn hair.  After the “routine” procedure my little one did not readily “come out” of the anesthesia.  In fact everyone else went home by noon and my child was still completely lethargic by sundown.  We finally got to take her home … with the doctor’s personal cell phone.  I shall refrain from mentioning some other pretty gory accidents I had as a kid in the superstitious hopes they won’t happen to my Baby Doll as well.  The American professional wrestler Johnny Gargano said, “You can never control injuries.  Accidents happen; that’s just how things go.”  I have various scars on my body which do not bother me at all; I guess I’m just not super vain.  Now my little girl has scars on her body that carry stories with them just as mine do.  However I confess I hope she does not get into anymore accidents.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *