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Diaper Bandit

Injuring Our Children is Okay

The other day I hurriedly zipped Elsie into her little jacket and heard a scream as the zipper reached the top.  "Shhh," I told her.  We were running late and I assumed she was just expressing resentment at having to put on another layer of clothes.  Elsie calmed down but when we reached our destination and I removed the jacket I saw that I'd actually pinched the skin on her chest pretty badly with the zipper.  It was bleeding!  Boy did I feel like a dumbass.  Proof of injury below:

 

 


But really, what parent doesn't injure his or her child at some point?  Of course it's accidental but we still feel badly about it.  My friend Dave Mason recently left his daughter on the sofa, turned around for just a second and then heard a frightening thud.  The baby had rolled off and hit the floor.  "I think she's okay though," reports Dave.  When, I wonder, will Elsie take her first big tumble due to my negligence?  I recently checked her skull and noticed that that freaky soft spot has closed up, so hopefully she can withstand whatever comes her way. 

 

Seriously, how many parents have tossed or lifted their kids high into the air only to discover a ceiling fan whirling above?  It probably happens every year.   Maybe every week.  There was a touching episode of the great radio show "This American Life" a few weeks ago where they talked about a study performed on baby monkeys where the babies always forgave their abusive fake monkey mothers, even when they did crazy things like shocked or hit them.   I can't explain it very well, but you can listen to the episode here, which I recommend highly. 

 

In conclusion, I'm not saying that injuring one's children is okay...oh wait I did say that in the title, but what I meant is these things happen and we shouldn't beat ourselves up over them when they do.  Especially when your cutting fingernails or zipping up jackets.  It's hard to avoid!   But ceiling fans and electrocution should be avoidable, for the most part.   


 

 


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Comments

 

spartic99 said:

I accidentally pinched my beautiful boy's chubby thigh in the car seat one day and I felt soooo bad! I think I cried more than he did and I couldn't help but kiss that bruise every time I saw it.

September 21, 2007 1:21 PM
 

Dave Mason said:

My baby is brain damaged from her fall off the couch due to my negligent supervision.  And I am in Brooklyn Central Booking because of it.  Injuring your children is NOT ok. NOt for the child or the parent.

September 21, 2007 2:28 PM
 

Rebecca said:

I was getting ready to put my son in his car seat the other say in a parking lot, and he stumbled and scraped both his knees. i didn't know that they were scraped until I got home, and I felt so bad! He was crying, and I was trying to make it seem like it was no big deal. I feel pretty bad about it. But you're right, it happens to the best of us. I have a friend who's baby broke her arm by falling out of bed.

September 22, 2007 3:57 AM
 

Pete said:

I have never hurt our baby Ida and never would, and even if I did I wouldn't be so proud of it.

September 22, 2007 11:42 AM
 

StaceysMom said:

When I was little my two younger sisters and I were playing. The middle sister and I were fighting over who would hold the baby and we were pulling on her and one of us (I think it was me!) pulled her arm our of its little socket. She went for a nap but when she woke up she wouldn't stop crying and my parents had to take her to the hospital to have it popped back in. I felt really bad. But she was ok.

September 24, 2007 9:09 AM
 

joanna said:

I am a nurse and know that injuring your child is not ok.  intentions are meaningless when your child is a quadraplegic because of your negligence.  

September 25, 2007 6:16 PM
 

Roper said:

Er...I think it's pretty clear that Arthur is talking about minor injuries here. Not injuries with serious, long-term consequences.

September 25, 2007 8:37 PM
 

Dan Dan Mian said:

Reading over the comments, I just have one question.  Is there wifi in Brooklyn Central Booking?  Because if there is, that's pretty cool.

As for baby-maiming, I'm against it.  But sometimes it happens - big whoop.  Your baby looks like she's on the road to recovery.  Just hope your wife forgives you.

September 26, 2007 4:52 PM
 

DaveMason1 said:

the above was submitted by a fake dave mason.  my daughter is tip top.

September 27, 2007 11:53 AM

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About the Blogger

Arthur Bradford

Arthur Bradford in Portland

His first book, Dogwalker, was published by Knopf in 2001, and in Vintage paperback in 2002. He is also the director of "How's Your News?", a documentary film series featuring news reporters with mental disabilities that has appeared on HBO, Cinemax, PBS and Trio (howsyournews.com).

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