Jane Ann McLachlan
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Year Seven: Sick Days (Reflection)

10/7/2012

4 Comments

 
The year I was seven, I was sick a lot. I got mumps and measles and chicken pox and German measles and colds and flues--I missed half the school year, one thing after another. It probably didn't help that I was afraid to sleep at night when I was sick, for fear of dying in my sleep.

My mom, a school teacher,  would wake me up in the morning and wrap me up, pajamas and all, in my favourite blanket and carry me out to the car all cosy and warm, and lay me on the back seat, and drive me to Mommy Riddell's house. This was a multitude of treats: not having to get dressed all day, being wrapped up in a warm blanket on a cold day (I still love sleeping under warm blankets in a cold room), and being carried (I was too old to be carried by my mom except when I was sick. It felt great to be carried in her arms again.)

Mommy Riddell was the woman who babysat me from the age of one-and-a-half, when my mom went back to teaching after daddy died. She had a son my brothers' age, and treated me like the daughter she never had. I'm sure it hurt my mom when I started calling my sitter "Mommy Riddell", but there was never any doubt in my mind who my real mommy was.

When we got there, my mom would carry me in my blanket into the Riddells' house and lie me on the living room couch. Not away in my bedroom at home, where I'd be expected to lie in bed and sleep, but right in the center of the house where I could see everything. There I would be nursed and waited on all day by my solicitous Mommy Riddell, until Mom came to carry me home again after the school day was done.

When I was grown up, my Mom told me how guilty she felt about waking up a sick child and dragging her out of bed to go to a babysitter.

"Mom," I said, "You can't imagine. Those are such happy memories for me, of being treasured and loved."

How often do we feel guilty over things we need not feel guilty about? How often do we berate ourselves for things our children (or loved ones) don't remember at all, or remember completely differently?  How often do we forget that the way we do things matters so much more that the things themselves?
4 Comments
Jessica Lerma link
10/8/2012 10:19:04 am

That is so sweet that you regard your memories of being sick with such fondness. I wasn't sick all that often but I do know what you mean about that feeling of being treasured. You have a very natural way of telling stories. I like your character development post as well.

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Gerry Wilson link
10/8/2012 11:30:06 am

Seven was a tough year! I decided not to write about it, but I lost almost half the school year because of a tonsillectomy that went badly (I hemorrhaged). I was nursed at home, though, and I have special memories of my grandmother during that time. She was the one who came up with special treats to keep me entertained. She cooked (I was on a special diet to "build me up") and generally catered to my every whim. Mother was working with Daddy at the store by then, I suppose. She isn't as present in those memories as my grandmother, for some reason. A beautiful post, Jane Ann. And that last paragraph caps it off perfectly. Just lovely.

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Jane Ann McLachlan link
10/8/2012 12:05:40 pm

Thanks, Jessica. I appreciate your comments.

Gerry. my illnesses ended in a tonsillectomy as well. Fortunately mine didn't go badly. I remember my mom visiting me in hospital - as long as she was there, I could be brave, but as soon as she left, all I could think of was the pain and how much I wanted her. I decided that she was the source of all my strength. Unfortunately, in those days, hospitals had very limited visiting hours for kids. But all that is another story, and I decided to limit myself to one per year - so as to have some for next year's challenge.

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Joy Weese Moll link
10/8/2012 04:50:25 pm

That's a lot of illness for one year. I had them all, but spread them out about one a year for the first 8 years or so of life. I had a knack for being sick on my birthday which is why there is an incomplete set of birthday photos.

I love how this piece ended. I didn't see it coming at all that you mother would feel guilty, since we saw the whole scene through your eyes. A sweet little twist that really makes me think.

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