Photo by: iStock

Your Sick Kid... YOUR Problem

Photo by: iStock

About this time last year, Pork Chop was in a daycare center while I worked full time in an office park across the street. I got to know many of the women who worked there, most were either single moms or seasoned grandmothers — all paid a paltry hourly wage to care for our precious children. And they did care. Day in and day out, they sang to my son, comforted him through new teeth, changed his leaky diapers, and soothed him to sleep in their arms. I am forever grateful to those women, who did nothing less than raise my child 8 hours per day, 5 days per week.

Then, one morning, after I’d dropped Pork Chop off to roll around with his baby cohorts, I overheard a mom chatting on her cellphone in the parking lot.

“Yeah, I gotta run. Need to get into the office ASAP. I’ll be lucky to get in four hours of work before they call me.” She said.

Someone’s expecting some important news, I thought to myself.

“Everywhere,” she went on. “It was everywhere. All night long. And he just wouldn’t stop screaming for me.”

Oh my. That sounds juicy, I thought to myself.

“Yeah. Yeah. I know. But I don’t have much of a choice. The client rep is really riding me. And I can’t take care of two miserable assholes at the same time, ya know. Hahaha!”

My god, we’re at a daycare center, lady, I thought to myself. Go be a pervert in some other parking lot.

Fast forward two days: after an otherwise uneventful shift at work, I waltz into the daycare center to pick up my son and am greeted by a horror movie scene. Puke: rivers, streams, lakes of puke. Children crying and puking. Daycare workers running, clutching paper towels, rending their clothes in sheer terror.

A realization dawned on me, albeit tardily. Ooooooh, I thought to myself, so she wasn’t talking about sex.

The daycare manager stopped me before I even made it to Pork Chop’s room.

“We’ve had an outbreak,” she explained, gesturing to the room assistant in rubber gloves and a face mask, “We’re bleaching everything. Get your son home, give him a bath, burn his clothes, and hope for the best.”

In the days that followed, one kid after another came down with the stomach flu. Our office population dipped for a week, as parents burned sick leave to care for their ailing little ones. The daycare staffers were not spared either; the same women who cared so tenderly for my son were stuck at home, presumably trying to care for themselves.

And it didn’t have to happen.

Don’t think for a minute that I lack sympathy for the parents of sick kids — for the single mom who really needs to be on time for her new job, for the stay-at-home dad who just needs a break from being cooped up in the house for days, for the working parents without any family in the area to lend a hand. I have buckets and toilets and bed pans worth of sympathy. I was holed up in the house for over a week during Pork Chop’s hand-foot-and-mouth episode. I have been sick with bronchitis at the same time that my son had the croup. Yes, yes, I admit it: It would be so much easier to hand my kid off to someone else so that I could work, or recuperate, or just have a moment free of bodily fluids. But my kid, my germs, my problem. My deadline or demanding boss or total exhaustion simply do not take priority over your kid’s health.

My husband likes to joke that my immune system, and that of our son, is less of a defense than a welcome mat. Despite constant hand-washing, a regular sleep schedule, vitamins, vegetables, and a live chicken sacrifice, Pork Chop and I pick up every single sniffle, cough, and rash. If I were to hear about a zombie virus on Monday, I can guarantee you that my son and I would be making a meal of my husband and the family dog by Wednesday. This year alone, I have paid for weeks (not days, but weeks) of daycare that my son couldn’t even use because he was sick.

My company is family friendly, and my boss is understanding. The story, however, can be quite different for single parents, for moms and dads who are paid by the hour, for folks laboring away at companies that think personal leave is akin to personal weakness. I get it. I really do. But you still CANNOT hand your toddler over to her daycare provider, particularly after a night-long vomiting session you fail to mention.

Come the ever-loving-hell on, people! When you knowingly send your sick kid to school or to daycare, when you cart your sick child to the library or to tumbling class or to a play group, you are being careless. Worse, you are being selfish. You are tired. I get it. You have a job. I get it. You don’t have backup child care. I get it. I get it. I get it. But that doesn’t make your germs someone else’s problem.

We can talk about the need to change corporate attitudes toward families. We can talk about better and cheaper access to health care and child care. We can talk about forming communities, ones that support parents in need. And we should talk about it, but in the meantime, remember that talking won’t stop people from getting sick.

So do me and the other folks a solid: If you know your child is sick, keep your kid home. (Pork Chop and I are one more runny nose away from becoming a CDC case study.)

Failing to strike it rich as a poet, Jessica Rapisarda succumbed to motherhood, humor writing, and snack chip addiction. She blogs about parenting, guilt, and other redundancies at Welcome to the Bundle. You can also find her on Facebook or follow her on Twitter.

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