Life is a Choking Hazard
By Tiffany Lewis
My
children are not orphans, but sometimes you just might wonder.
At
the end of a long afternoon at the park, we stroll home, brown
and dusty. Jackson, my oldest, carries a handful of sticks,
which he likes to gnaw on in the absence of fruit snacks. Addison,
the younger, is shoeless, sometimes pants-less, and his mouth
is rimmed with sand.
Most
kids at the park play on the plastic playscape. My sons head straight for the dirt, the sand,
and the sticks. Sometimes they roll in it. Often they eat
it. I allow this because I have a testimony of dirt. When
I was in second grade, my best friend and I snacked on grass
stew at recess. In fourth grade I munched on napkins with ketchup
and mustard. These are character-building experiences.
That
said, laid-back parenting has not come
easy for me. When Jackson was born, I suddenly turned into
this tense, nervous woman. But then one day I had an epiphany.
When
Jackson was 18 months, I took him to the
doctor for his routine checkup. He was munching on raisins
when the pediatrician walked into the room. “Now, remember,”
she said, “raisins are still a choking
hazard.”
I
mulled her warning over and over in my mind. Something about
it bothered me, like the way I get patiently annoyed when strangers
chide me for letting my son chew on car keys. Finally my mind
landed upon this thought: “Life is a choking hazard.”
In the very act of parenting, we are bringing our children into
a world of obstacles and pain, and we simply can’t protect them
every step of the way.
As
a parent, it’s easy to be seized with fear. It begins before
your baby is even born, when you feel those funny aches and
pains. Then the kicking comes, and stops,
and you worry again. You worry about the physical abnormalities
and the mental limitations.
Then
the baby arrives and you have a whole new set of fears. Things
that had happy associations in your life become evil — things
like mangoes, honey, and the sun, for goodness’ sake.
When your child begins to move, you fret over stray coins, the
cleaner you used on the carpet, and the fact that your child
is sucking on the bottom of your shoe. Then they begin to walk
and you really wish someone would invent a giant plastic hamster
ball for toddlers, preferably well padded.
I’ve
done my fair share of worrying, staying up at night thinking
about my children’s future, going all the way from falling down
the stairs to that first bully on the playground. I worry about
swear words and pornography and hoodlum kids with craggy teeth
and sagging jeans. My son isn’t even potty trained, but I’ve
given myself stomach cramps picturing his entire future.
I’ve
stopped reading parenting books because they hit you with every
possible danger your child could encounter. Then they turn
around and tell you to just relax and take things one day at
a time (but don’t forget to pad the faucet head and install
that stove guard).
Last
summer, while visiting my parents in Texas, my son stuck his
hand in a hornet’s nest at the park. I had read all the parenting
books on first aid, so like a good parent, I screamed, panicked,
and froze, which of course did wonders for his state
of mind. Then I picked him up and ran. Images from the movie
My Girl kept playing through my head as I carried my
son to the car. My mom called a doctor and we drove circles
around the hospital, waiting for any signs of allergy. An hour
later he was unscathed, happily licking a chocolate ice cream
cone.
I
learned a valuable lesson from this. It does very little good
to worry yourself sick with preemptive fear. You can protect your child
from the sun, the sidewalk, the zooming cars, and the mosquitoes
by keeping him inside the shelter of your home. He’ll still
find a way to get hurt. Our living room is so padded and childproof
it looks like a bounce house, but my kids still manage to impale
themselves, on each other’s fingers, once a day. You can lock
and seal every cabinet, but your wise son will still find the
bathroom cleaner, aim it directly at his eye, and spray. And
you can plan perfectly child-friendly birthday parties and still
end up in the emergency room when your son falls off a chair
and splits his lip on the corner of the stairs. (At this point
you can wish really hard you had girls, who don’t seem to get
hurt nearly as often.)
When these calamities come your way, you do as any rational
parent would do. You panic, you scream, you figure
it out. You and your child both get a little wiser.
There
was a time, long ago, when children would roam the neighborhood
all day long, barefoot, wearing Popsicle-stained shirts and
riding Big Wheels. I watch the kids these days sporting mini
Abercrombie and driving mini motorized Hummers to a park that’s
not a block from their house. They check in with their mom
every five minutes via walkie-talkie and carry 100% Real Fruit
Juice boxes. They’re told to be careful and for heaven’s
sake, don’t get DIRTY!
I
wonder what this future generation will be like after having
grown up in a speck-free bubble. They really are in the hamster’s
ball, and someday they’ll have to break out and confront a very
messy, dirty world. What then?
Danger
is real, and so is fear. But somewhere along the way there
has to be a little faith. Faith that our kids’ lives will play
out the way they’re supposed to. And faith that, just as when
Christ came to the Americas, there are angels both administering
to and protecting our children, not just from physical harm,
but from a future filled with adversity. Our Father in Heaven
loves his children, more than even we hovering parents, and
he is mindful of them. And I believe he circles them, his little
ones, with his own ring of fire.
The
future, with all its bugs and band-aids, bullies and bruises,
is still a wonderful, precious thing.
So
gate the stairs and lock the cupboards. Then let your children
run barefoot in the grass. And eat that handful of sand. Life
can taste delicious.