Once upon a time, there was a little girl named ‘Jenny’. She seemed to be about five years old and she was splashing and having fun with a few other little girls in the lake. At one moment, she stepped on a rock in the lake and started to cry. While she tried to run through the lake to find her mom, she slipped and choked in a bunch of water. Within a couple of minutes, a woman sitting near the edge of the lake noticed a little girl floating in the water. She ran to her but it was too late. Jenny couldn’t be saved.
There is NOTHING in your car that is so important that you need to leave your child to get. NOTHING.
Christine says
I have an unnatural fear of drowning. My kids drowning.
Just typing that last sentence made my stomach turn.
The brother and sister that drown last week. And then the boy in Sherkston. The toddler in the backyard pond several weeks ago…
I CANNOT imagine any of my kids out of my eyesight near open water. Even my 11yr old.
OMIGOD Sara I’m not sure I could have kept quiet.
Kath is right, “Jenny” (and her mom) is lucky that it was you.
Kath says
Wow. I will admit I fall more on the free-range side of the parenting spectrum, but at five, near water and crowds of people? I would be keeping a closer eye on my child, for sure. Also: her reaction of just sauntering over and saying, “thanks” seems way below where it should be to me. That little girl is lucky you were the one who helped her out.
Julie says
although not as serious i, too, have “parented” a couple of kids and it ticked me off…not the time when the mother was trying to avert a problem with another kid, but when they were chatting with someone else and ignoring their charge.
5 is too young for complete unsupervised behaviour!
snikks says
No! you are not wrong! Nothing should EVER be more important than your child, but unfortunately, not everyone puts them first.
Tracey says
Uch, some people… *slap-slap*
Alice says
I’m totally with you here. You either take her back with you, or wait until you get back to the car to send that text or check your messages. That, or go to the beach with another family so either of you can cover each other for those little errands. I hate even taking both kids to the park together, because they run in different directions and make it harder to keep my eyes on them. Yikes.
Chantel says
OMG! That is chilling Sara! I watch my kiddies like a hawk – to the point that my eyes get sore as well as my head from turning left to right and behind me. You are so right – there is NOTHING that should take you away from your child – even for a few seconds that is all it takes.
Thank you for such an amazing post!
Anonymous says
You are not wrong!! It was always exhausting watching the kids in the surf in Maine.
One time Pauline took them down to the beach and lost them!! Needless to say,
I should have known better as she was starting to show signs of getting
Dimentia…I was frantic!
Things can happen in an instant, and I say that literally as I took Fraser’s life jacket off to give him some food, and within a minute he had jumped into the deep end of the pool sans said life jacket. He didn’t know how to swim, My head was turned for one minute putting away the food probably, and Toran noticed him in the pool. It still gives me goose bumps thinking about it, and I was sitting right beside the pool!!!!