How many of you have
ever encountered a child that seems to find himself in
trouble without any trouble at all? Lucky for
her, my daughter was 2-years old when my son was
born. If he had been born first, I'm not
sure I would have had any more. "That
sounds terrible!" you might say. Well,
don't judge me too harshly, until you've spent a few
minutes reading the following story about my small
son.
It all
began when I remarried, three years after a very
painful divorce. Spencer had been a very
sweet child, curious and huggable. But one
day everything changed . . . in a VERY big way.
Because he was too young for
pre-school at the time and I was hunting for a job, we
were thrown together each day for 10 hours of fun and
frolic. Spencer was one of those children
that wanted to know the "why" of
everything. Among the ways that we
entertained ourselves was reading, which we
did daily. Maybe that was the beginning of
the end, because I think he made up stories in
his own mind and then played them out on the big screen
of my living space.
One
morning I asked him if he wanted to help me clean the
house. He was all bright-eyed and excitedly
jumped up into my lap. We started downstairs,
and when that area was finished, we headed
upstairs. I'd forgotten to take the dustpan
with me and asked Spencer if he'd like to go and get
it like a big boy. He quickly ran down the
stairs and out of sight.
He couldn't have been gone more than three
minutes, when I called down to him, "Spencer, are
you coming?" He responded, "Yes,
Mom. I'm on my way!!" And
there he was. It was so sweet to watch him
climbing the stairs with the dustpan, doing just as I
had asked him to do. Once we finished
sweeping and dusting upstairs, we went down to put the
cleaning supplies away. That was when it
happened. . .
I
immediately noticed the bottle of children's
mult-vitamins on the counter. I eyed the
bottle in confusion, because I thought I'd
returned them to the top shelf inside the cabinet after
I gave them to the kids that morning. I
shrugged it off and picked up the vitamins and began to
put them in the cabinet. That's when I
realized that there were lots of vitamins missing from
the bottle, so I laid it down on the
counter. I then asked Spencer,
"Honey, did you take one of these vitamins while
you were down here?" I knew he had, but
he denied it. So, I said, "Well, you did
take one. In fact, you took a bunch of them,
didn't you?" Finally, he agreed that he
had taken some.
Being the disciplinarian that I was, I scolded
him and said, "I was going to let you skip your
nap today because we're having so much fun, but now I
think you must need one because you
misbehaved." Spencer amazingly didn't
cry or complain. He just said,
"okay." I took him upstairs and
tucked him into bed. He told me he was sleepy
anyway.
When I went back
downstairs, I shook my head as I picked up the
multi-vitamin bottle. I opened the
"childproof" cap and counted the number of
tablets remaining. My son had ingested over
30 vitamins!! Suddenly, there jumped off the
label a very bold warning -
Call Poison
Control if Overdose Taken.
"Oh my gosh," I cried as ran next door to use
the neighbor's phone. I called the 1-800
number and someone answered immediately.
Frantically, I explained what had happened, and the man
at the Poison Center said Spencer would be fine, but
there were a couple of things I must do.
First, he told me I
must get Ipecac from the local pharmacy, which
would cause Spencer to vomit the vitamins.
This, of course, was difficult since I didn't have a
car! The second crucial thing was that I must
not let my son fall asleep!! I explained that
I put him in for a nap not five minutes
earlier. The man urged me to run
quickly, wake him up and keep him up until my
husband arrived home with the Ipecac.
I ran next door and flew up
the stairs. There was my tiny boy
sound asleep with his little hands nestled up next to
his face. I shook him, but he didn't
wake. I shook him again, but harder this
time. Finally, he ask, "Mom, what are
you doing? You told me to take a
nap?" I told him he had to wake up,
which really aggravated him because he was sleeping so
soundly - in fact he was semi-comatose.
Then I remembered
that my husband had to be
called. This time with a very sleepy 3-year
old in tow, I ran next door again to call
him. I reached my husband's boss and
explained everything to him. He said he'd
take care of it. My husband worked
about 20 minutes from the house, and I'm telling you
the truth, it was not 20 minutes later when he arrived
home
with Ipecac in
hand. It's a wonder he didn't kill somebody
racing as he did.
My
husband and I bounded up the stairs to the
bathroom. I tried to explain to Spencer what
was going to happen to him. But, how do you
explain vomitting to a child who's never done
it? Now comes the funny part.
If you know anything about
Ipecac, it's that vomitting is induced pretty much
immediately. And violently. I'm
holding Spencer over the toilet, and he thinks I'm
about to drown him in that nasty place. He
starts screaming that he's scared, and I'm trying to
soothe him by telling him, "In a minute honey,
you're going to get a little
bellyache." I just didn't want him to
be surprised by it!
Suffice it to say
that he removed the poison from within him in very
short order. And it totally freaked him
out. In between "episodes," he
said, "Oh Mommy, I don't like
this." I'm not so cruel as to say,
"well, if you hadn't . . . " but boy or boy
I wanted to say it.
That
afternoon, when my daughter came home from school,
Spencer met her at the door. He was still
whimpering a bit when he told her, "Heather,
don't ever take any pills that don't belong to
you!"
Shortly after
that we were visiting an elderly friend of ours, and
she had her medicine on a lazy Susan turntable on her
kitchen table. Spencer eyed it from afar and
said, "Don't touch it, Heather,
or you'll have to puke!"
One lesson learned . . . at
least temporarily.
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