“U were hit by a car?! Did u die?”
October 22, 2009 By: almostgotit Category: Uncategorized, family, feminism, feminist, inner critic, kids, motherhood, mothers, parenthood, parenting, parenting teensFor me, it was mostly a blur. For the 13 year old, it was mostly about Facebook.
What do you do when reporting to the scene of your own child’s accident? I did it. I barely registered these peripherals: A firetruck. A police car. An ambulance. A school bus FULL of alert, chattering faces, all looking out at us. More firemen than could possibly have fit in the truck. A red car which was clearly the culprit. The dear bus driver. The neighbors who had knocked on my door. The sudden and miraculous appearance of a friend from across town, offering me a ride to the hospital following the ambulance.
My daughter wanted to use my phone at the hospital to Facebook her friends about the accident, and I didn’t let her, as we needed to be attentive and helpful to the people who were still attending to her.
But perhaps even more, I felt that Facebooking from the hospital was unseemly in a way I couldn’t quite explain to myself. Was it Inappropriate attention-seeking, when she hadn’t really been “harmed?” (but of course she’d been harmed. Someone HIT HER BODY. With a CAR.)
We came home and she immediately headed for the computer, and I heard myself telling her not to “over-communicate.” Then I realized I was censoring her, and for no good reason.
“Why not?” asked the wiser woman inside of me.
Why not let her reach out to her friends, immersing herself in a reassuring buzz of “Plz tell me what happnd!” and “I am so GLAD ur okay!” Why not let her tell her story over and over, processing it by sharing it? Why not allow her to redeem her own story by taking the lead in telling it?
So I changed my mind. “Communicate AWAY!” I said. “ALL you want to!”
And she did. She tapped away for a couple hours on Facebook, where the news was already spreading through Middle School Land. Several new “friend requests” appeared from breathless thrill seekers who wanted to be closer to the action. Chat messages bipped like popcorn from friends and people she hardly knew.
Was it unseemly? I decided not. My daughter was motoring along on her own power, getting what she needed, and learning she could at the same time. Why did she deserve it any less just because she hadn’t actually broken any bones?
And, as I reminded myself, there WAS hurt here. My little girl’s trust had been violated, her PERSON had been violated in a way she didn’t expect or deserve, by someone who had physically struck her with a lethal ton of steel. She had been exposed to a bus full of her adolescent peers who had eagerly watched her for 30 minutes in the immediate aftermath of the accident, some even snapping pictures of her with their cell phones. So why shouldn’t she re-fashion herself as a bit of a heroine? Why shouldn’t she even have, YES, a bit of a bask in her 15 minutes of fame? (She confessed, a couple of times, to wishing she had at least a splint…)
School the day after was much more of the same for her. Everyone was talking about the kid who had been run over… by a car? a bus? The nurse called her out of class. The principal called her out of class. It could have been awful, but my daughter chose not to let it be. And how proud my daughter’s friends were to know her, getting their OWN share of attention by bearing the much-coveted details.
On the bus home the day after, there was silence as my daughter walked down the aisle to her seat. The bus driver stood and gave a lecture to the kids about safety, calling my daughter ”one lucky chick” and describing how he’d almost had a heart attack watching her get hit the day before, and almost hadn’t come to work this day.
And when her bus stop came, there was silence again as my daughter got off the bus. She carefully crossed the street, turned, and waved. And the entire bus burst into cheers!
Cue the theme from “The Natural,” and Hurray for The Kid who Lived to Ride the Bus Another Day!



October 22nd, 2009 at 10:23 am
Well once again your writing makes my heart sing.
October 22nd, 2009 at 10:47 am
Heroic, indeed. Your generosity and your daughter’s persistence afforded her moments to shine and (by some grace) without too much sacrifice. What could be wrong with that?
October 22nd, 2009 at 11:45 am
Wonderful! One lucky chick, indeed.
October 22nd, 2009 at 1:48 pm
Again, thank goodness she’s ok!
October 22nd, 2009 at 2:08 pm
(Smile.)
October 22nd, 2009 at 3:28 pm
u r makn me cry
October 22nd, 2009 at 4:08 pm
It WAS awful, to some extent. I didn’t WANT to be on Facebook for two hours, but people kept chatting with me. I didn’t like being asked all day if I was ok. It was NOT fun.
October 22nd, 2009 at 4:09 pm
Also my friends don’t talk like that.
October 24th, 2009 at 9:14 pm
A very tender rendition of a mother’s reaction. This mother remembers and sends a hug. Such is the flood of feeling when peril strikes YOUR child.
October 25th, 2009 at 9:25 pm
I totally agree with your decision to let her have her moment. It was as much for those kids as it was for her…some of them saw her hit, and like you, remember the ambulance, the fire engines, the feeling of dread that something Terrible has happened, and just as importantly, the relief at discovering their friend was not dead, but very much alive and well. Part of dealing with the trauma (and there is trauma, whether or not it’s in the form of bruises or nightmares), is talking about it, having those moments where someone says “wow…you survived.”
Thank you for sharing your story. I wish you and your girl all good blessings from now on!
November 3rd, 2009 at 12:41 pm
The celebration of your daughter’s survival and experience and her ability to play it well and get her needs met is a great example of something I *think* I’ve been noticing in my little corner of the world. Middle school does not seem to be what it was when I was there. (I have a 13 year old as well). It’s interesting – kids seem more often to celebrate difference more rather than be repulsed by it or judge it as they did consistently when I was young. Recently, a friend’s kid who lost his leg to cancer was a celebrity, not an oddity. The kids with Downs Syndrome and other disabilities aren’t universally appreciated perhaps, but the others seem to understand that there’s a gift in knowing how to respond to difference in a skillful way rather than being petty or judging. Bravo to your daughter. Enjoy.
December 8th, 2009 at 5:59 pm
[...] best present was having our daughter survive, and relatively unscathed, being hit by a car as she was getting off a school bus a few weeks [...]