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Tara Connor's avatar

Oh, been there! Sending hugs and lots of reassurances that you're doing the right thing. My son is 22 and I still shudder at those memories. He was 8 when he had his palate expander. I remember calling my mom after the very first vaccine appointment I took my son to and telling her how hard it had been. She said, "That's the first in a very long line of things you'll wish they could just do to you, not him." And I think of that so much. Every injury, surgery, heartbreak, I always think, "Let me have it. Why can't I just do this for them." But of course we can't. We just have to prepare them as best we can, and stand beside them when they'll let us. This week I'm back to posting here after a month away. A rough year personally plus the election hit me hard and I took the whole month of November off from Poetical. But I'm rested and letting go of doubts about my poetry and my ability to sustain a weekly post. Time to dive back in and see what happens.

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Diana Franco's avatar

I had a palate expander as a kid and this post brought back all those feelings! I had it at 8 yrs old and I’m 43 now and I can still feel the metal and plastic if I’m reminded…but honestly I’ve never thought about it from my mother’s POV! She was young at the time, and it must have been so stressful for her. But in my memory it was kind of a “we’re in this together” type of thing. I remember vaguely that she hated it so much too and it really gave her the heebie jeebies but I was focused on my own discomfort. Still, I never thought of just how much it had to be hard on her, because at the time of all that pain for me my mom was also my biggest comfort (I had braces for FOUR YEARS after; she was my rock through all the pain and stress). I’m having so much newfound respect for my mom who was so willing to jump in and do the hard things, though she and my dad had a deal that she would handle most ailments and sicknesses and broken bones but if there was blood and/or guts, my dad would have to handle it. I always thought that was funny. And in the end, she dealt with quite a lot of blood and guts from me and my brother. Anyway, I’m not a mom, but big shoutout to all the moms who do the bravest things every day. Even if the bravery is knowing what you cannot do.

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