I could not convince her to make a break for it.
I was both disappointed and relieved. After cooling our
heels in the waiting room for the better part of an hour with my girl
coughcoughcoughcoughcoughcough oh my god make it stop coughing all over the air
that half a dozen newborn babes were sucking into their thimble sized lungs, we
had finally been seen by a mildly dismissive resident and asked to wait for the
doctor-doctor to sign off on the fact that my girl would need to present more
impressive symptoms if she wanted to wow them. The prognosis itself was fine, I’ve
been down this road a time or two. I’d decided at 4:30 am that my girl needed
to have her throat looked at and her lungs listened to and I was following
through with that plan, but I’m not one of those parents who pleads for antibiotics
if no evidence of a bacterial infection exists. I just wanted to get out of
there, and I knew that the attending physician was going to agree with her resident,
why wouldn’t she? So as the minutes ticked by, I became more and more antsy and
I tried to convince my girl that we should run.
I knew she wouldn’t do it. I wasn’t sure if I would, but I
liked imagining how it would go down. I figured the staff would be in a frenzy,
worried that they’d misplaced their very important patients, full of regret for
the length of our wait, and so scared for our safety! Or, um. Maybe they’d be
relieved. Or wouldn’t notice.
We never had the chance to see this fantasy to fruition,
because the doctor eventually came and *gasp* she agreed with the resident and
it was all a huge stinking heap of bullshit wrapped in healthcare that I’m grateful
to have. Whatevs.
Sick days, though. Remember those? The delicious luxury of
being directed back into bed on a school day? My girl is the kind of kid who pleads
through her spewing lung spray to go to school. She missed two days in a row
for this relentlessly gross cough. Monday dad stayed home with her, and when I called
to check on her at lunchtime she was heating up leftovers while dad napped.
That is called doing it wrong, like the
time my dad brought me home after having my dislocated elbow set in a cast and
handed me my brown paper sack to enjoy for lunch when the occasion clearly
called for McDonald’s. Tuesday was my turn
to stay home with our baby, and other than the doctor’s office debacle, I did it
up right. Breakfast on a tray, pillow cloud on the couch with just-inappropriate-enough
movies, bendy straws, and unlimited access to popsicles and lifesavers.
At any rate, everyone is back at their respective day job
today. I want a popsicle.
4 comments:
I'm sorry, but the image of your girl heating up lefties whilst Mr. Can was napping on the couch is absolutely hilarious.
I'm glad Madame is feeling better, and I'm sorry for the unpleasantness of it all, and have yourself a pockaloo on me.
xxxxEllie
Hope Little Ms. C is feeling better. And I can't believe Dad made you eat your bag lunch instead of taking you out! xo
I so with you two made a dash for it!
And next time I'm sick at home, I'm going to call and request the bendy straws, k?
Hope C is done with her coughcoughcoughcoughcoughcough oh my god make it stop coughing ;)
xo,
Beth
Ha ha ha, I need Dana Tappen! I so *wish* you made a dash for it....
b
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