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Family Room: Articles
Innocent Perspective: A Mother's Reflections on September 11, 2001
By Kristen Caven
On Tuesday, September 11th, my four-year old vehicle expert told people
very importantly that "an airplane had crashed into a building."
And the next day he wanted to "watch New York" on TV - all the rescue
and construction equipment was much more interesting than nap
time. I took a deep comfort in his innocent perspective.
By the time the weekend rolled around, though, a loneliness hung around
our small family, perhaps exacerbated by the fact that mom and dad were on
the phone all the time, and friendly visitors also seemed to carry a cloud
of debris in their hearts. On Sunday my son grew warm and listless, and that
night began crying out every hour in a fever.
For the next few days the fever clung, and he clung to me. This time I took
comfort in the small scale of a bad virus and willingly sat under him
for a few days. I was grateful for the moments he was asleep, for then
I could turn on the television and try to absorb it all, sort it all out.
He was desperately afraid of being alone, and I would run to him each
time he woke.
He complained of a sore throat and stopped eating. The doctor blamed
a virus that causes blisters in the mouth and prescribed tylenol,
liquids and rest. After a few days I was exhausted. I didn't know what
was worse - battling with him to get him to take medicine, or hearing
him cry out in pain each time he swallowed. His mouth and throat were
covered with white, oozing sores. Eventually we discovered a strep
infection raging behind the blisters.
Today he is on the mend, thanks to an army of antibiotics and a new construction
set to play can we fix it with. But he hasn't seemed himself.
Every interaction is demanding and tense. I figure it's because he's cranky
because he hasn't eaten in three days.
But finally, he opens up his feelings. Mom, dad, I'm worried,
he tells us on the cranky edge of sleep, beginning to weep. He is worried
about Oakland. About the buildings falling down. About car crashes. Suddenly
I realized he has been there with us in our confusion and grief. He is
not a baby anymore. Although it seemed important at the time, I wonder
now if sharing the spectacle with my vehicle-loving son (who previously
had wanted to see every jack-knifed big-rig and derailed train) was the
right thing to do. Did he feel something was being forced down his throat?
Was it too much for him to swallow? A part of him must have welcomed that
virus and that bacteria. It gave him a time-out. He gave me the gift of
a time-out, too.
Tonight after we fought about toothpaste (I let him win), we talked a
long time. About bad guys. About sadness. About safety. I told him we
were all sad but we were glad to be together. I told him our house wouldn't
fall down. I told him this terrible thing that happened had never happened
before. I told him all the presidents of every country in the world were
going to work together to try to make sure this would never happen. Because
they all want to protect and take care of children. And you'll take
care of me, right? he asked. Yes little one, I will, no matter what.
He went to sleep peacefully for the first time in days. He just grew up
a lot, and as a mom, I just did, too. I really want my words to be true.
We will all work together to protect and take care of children.
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