Vaccines and a flu shot for my three-year-old. Please have mercy, world.
We had a long talk driving to the pediatrician’s office
about the word “brave.” Darcy said, “It means I’m strong! I’m not afraid!” I
even used a mechanical pencil after breakfast to play out the whole scenario.
She didn’t remember anything about shots.
After the first prick, Darcy reached for me. “Save me or I
might die!” said her expression. But then, she noticed I was the one
restraining her. Oh, horrible! She began fighting both the nurse and me. How
did I keep from collapsing? All I felt like doing was crying for help. “It
means I’m strong! I’m not afraid!” sounded over and over in my mind. Her whole
body was shaking with fear and pain. When did I become a real mom--the kind
that finds the brave face for her child? One day she will know behind the brave
was a screaming, boiling pot of emotion threatening to spill.
It breaks a mom inside to see her child hurting. She
reminded me of a deflated Darcy, my wild jaguar cub turned gloomy golden
retriever. After all of the trauma and pain were through, she sat in her car seat
with a broken heart. Sniffling. There were shiny band aids adorning her arms,
like a mini war horse. I called Steven in a panic, needing immediate ideas.“I think that deserves a McDonald’s shake,” he said. I’d never seen anyone
slurp a strawberry shake so sadly.
I needed to find a book of children’s scriptures at Deseret.
That’s where she saw him: Ali the alligator. He sat on the shelf so soft and
cuddly, so whimsical, everything Darcy cherishes. I knew it was weak of me! I knew
this meant that from now on, whenever something went badly in Darcy’s life, she
would expect stuffed alligators. But even moms aren’t all that strong and brave all the
time.
1 comments:
You're so cute! All moms can relate to this! It's SO HARD to see your child sick, hurt, unhappy! What's worse is when they have bigger problems as teenagers that a cooky or stuffed alligator can't solve! :(
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