My dear friends … I have a story to tell you. It’s difficult for me to tell because I must admit my mistake and that is a hard thing even for this admitted over-sharer. I debated much over the past few weeks, but here it is … for two reasons, which I will share with you at the end.
Wee Man almost drowned in a pool last month.
There were six adults watching all the children. We were obsessively counting kids all day. I was teaching him how to swim. Up until the moment he stepped off the ledge to swim to the side, he had a healthy fear of the deep end and stayed far from it. I thought we were doing everything right.
But my brave boy decided he COULD swim to the side. He told me later, “I kicked, Mommy! But I couldn’t reach the floor.” And in the moments he decided to be brave, two other children started coughing and choking on lunch. We all turned at once to the babies, our attention caught. And when Second Son was fine, and calm, I took him from my cousin and turned to count for the Wee Man.
He was limp and unmoving at the bottom. A terrifying, still blue shape next to the edge. I screamed and screamed. I put Second Son on the concrete, still screaming. In those seconds, my cousin pulled him up and handed him to my sister. I saw his eyes open and his body unmoving and I was undone.
I thought my baby was dead or dying and I couldn’t watch it.
Someone told me I was saying “This can’t happen, this can’t happen.”
Truthfully, I don’t physically remember much of what I am telling you in the sequence of events. Most of this was pieced together after the fact. In the unfolding, I was blacking out most of the details, consumed by the image of my son in the pool.
My sister ran to my other cousin, fearful because she didn’t know CPR, didn’t know what to do in that moment. My cousin pressed on his chest and he started breathing immediately, and then crying and asking for a towel. I didn’t see this either, because I was sobbing, curled up in a ball against the garage wall.
I couldn’t watch him die. For five seconds? I thought I let my baby die. Nothing I have ever faced was worse than the moments with my forehead pushed into the stucco, my arms physically holding me together while my world shattered.
When they put him in my arms … inhaling, exhaling … crying a little, I held him, still sobbing, now out of relief, and still a lot of fear. There were other things to consider now, lack of oxygen, and dry drowning. He was blue-ish around the lips and more than a little sleepy.
The rest of the details are unnecessary. His color returned, but we still called 911, and they held him overnight for observation at Scottish Rite Children’s hospital in Atlanta. There were zero negative physical effects. No water in his lungs or stomach … nothing. He is not traumatized in the least by it, probably because it was a deliberate attempt at swimming. In fact, we believe he just held his breath too long trying to get to the side.
It took less than a minute of me being distracted for this to happen. Me, who thought I was doing everything right. Me, who does know CPR and puts sunscreen on my children … and would die for them.
Praise God we saw him in time. Praise God for His mercy in preserving his life and the spark that makes him the Wee Man. I spent 24 hours snuggling him in a hospital bed marveling at his life, and what a gift it is. Praise God for giving the Husband a midnight mission, which meant he was awake at 4 pm Atlanta time and wanted to talk. Praise God for a Husband who was gracious and loving when I crumbled in the stark light of the ER, sobbing when I told him I almost lost our baby.
So why, again, do I tell you this.
{one} Every parent person should know CPR. No exceptions. So friends? Take a CPR course now. Right now. I will be re-taking the course this month. My sister will be taking it for the first time, and is gathering friends to do the same. There is no excuse for not having the tools to help save a life.
{two} In the days surrounding the incident, the impossibly tragic phenomenon of children being forgotten in hot cars was the topic of conversation everywhere … in the news, among friends, overtaking social media. {For a thoughtful, nuanced read on the subject, go here.} I could barely stomach the conversations … for those five seconds, I was almost a version of those parents, a mother who let their baby die. It physically hurts, even now, to type that.
The other day, I was watching Wee Man carefully line his “monies” up on the leather ottoman, and I had a nauseating flashback to his lifeless body at the bottom of an impossibly blue pool. And those five seconds, they come over me like a wave of otherworldly “what-ifs” and that, my friends, is the second reason I am telling you this story and preaching grace and compassion in the midst of the unholy flame wars that parenting can become.
That is why I am asking you ~ before anytime you engage ~ for on-your-tear-streaked-face prayers before a still-Righteous, still-Holy Father who works in ways that are incomprehensible to us. We, the body of Christ, we bear one anothers’ burdens.
Parenting wars are ugly, and we crucify each other over a laundry list of lesser offenses, secure in our self-righteous knowledge that we are doing it the most right. Or at least better than those people over there and everywhere. Can I tell you one of the heart-wrenching lessons I learned last month. It could have been me. It could be you tomorrow.
There is enough vitriol in the self-righteous fury of the internet to bury us all … be a life raft of mercy, of forgiveness, and still, of faith.
~M.
{My super babe-my heart is so grateful for him.}
Linking up to Five Minute Friday … and clearly this took longer than five minutes, but have grace … the prompt is exhale, and it was all I needed to spill this out. Plus, you should all take CPR.
Oh how I love you, friend! Hugs, big ole bear hugs! What a HORRIBLE moment to live through!!! I never, for a moment, wish for the “could have been” moments, but I am thankful for their sobering reminders and the wave of mercy and thanksgiving that followed this one!
Oh Molly! Hugs and thankful prayers from the other side of the state. I am so glad everything turned out ok. I have always been amazed at the ability of kids to bounce back, as your Wee Man has. And you are spot on: It could have been you or any of us, in spite of our best intentions.
When our youngest was around 3 years old, my brother got married in my parent’s backyard, which has a pool. There were lots of adults around, and my hubby and I were taking turns watching the girls. We, too, took our eyes off Leslie for a moment. We realized she was in the water when someone screamed, and we turned to see her bobbing and going under. My uncle, who was closer than any of us, jumped in to get her, dress pants, shiny shoes, and all. It still makes me tear up when I think about it, yet she doesn’t recall it at all, nor did it dissuade her from her adventurous spirit.
Oh Molly. Tears streaming down my face. I’m so sorry you had to endure that, but thankful that he’s OK. Praying for you to live in grace and not guilt. I know it could be me next. Love you so much.
Molly…first we love you and are so glad that everyone is doing fine. John and I can laugh about this now but the second day that we had Z I fell with her while she was strapped to me in a front facing baby backpack. Our first and only child and I tried my best not to land right on her but we hit the ground hard. For a terrifying moment there was no crying from baby who seemed always to cry. I could care less about me, all I could think was the very worst had happened because I was looking at a tree and trying to walk at the same time. After a moment, Z let out her first laugh and it took every ounce of energy to find composure. Z and I look at trees together now, I walk more carefully and can recognize that she is utterly fearless. For the longest time I would have breathtaking flashbacks to that moment, I could hear every sound, feel the impact, it is like a terrible movie that you are acting in. Life would be moving forward but I would be stuck in that time and place. With time, love, laughter that terrible moment comes up only once in a blue moon now. Although it hurts keep talking about it, write about it, look for the silver lining and the message this will fade and you will start breathing again and living in the precious moments we have today and not the past. Praying for you, sending our love. Becky otherwise known as Z’s mom!
I am so glad you and Wee-Man are okay! What a powerful post on many levels. Small children and pools are a crazy challenge. When my daughter was 2 fell in the pool as she was walking right behind me pushing a baby stroller. It made no sound with all the kid noise around. The life guard pulled her out because I never saw her. She had been right there… So scary! Enjoyed meeting you at Allume last fall.
I shared your post on my page today. I hope lots of folks read this!
I am so glad you little man is okay. But oh so scary. What a powerful and needed reminder for us. I will be looking into this as I for one do not know CPR. I also need to give myself a refresher course on how to give my son his emergency insulin shot. I’ve found him half unconscious twice and it scares me to the point of freezing. Thankfully 911 responds so quickly. But it’s something I MUST be prepared to do.
Blessings.