
Dear Parents that Send Sick Kids to School/Practice/Games/Birthday Parties,
I hate you. No, really; I actually hate you. I donât like hate â I say it as a way of expressing myself, but hate â to me â feels like such a wasted emotion. I dislike a lot of things and a lot of people (bad drivers and unhygienic people), but I donât hate them. I donât care enough about them to hate them. But you; you I hate. I hate you because you keep bringing your sick kid around my kid. I hate you because you are doing the world a great disservice.
I know what you are going to say: I canât afford to stay home with my sick kid because I work outside the home. I get it, okay? And trust me when I say that I feel so much for you. I know how that feels, even though I donât work outside the home. I work from home, and that means when my kids are sick and I have to keep them home, my day is longer than ever. I canât get things done, it stresses me out and I hate having to email my editor and apologize that things just arenât getting done because I have a tiny human that has glued herself to my body and will not let me go, plus three more that also need my attention. I feel guilty, and I donât love that.
I donât envy your position; I really donât. I respect it, in fact. But, you are still doing yourself a great disservice. Why? Because you are sending your kid to school sick, and he or she is spreading those germs around like wildfire. My kid will get them. The other kids will get them, they will come to school and then the germs make their way back to your kid. Now you have a kid thatâs sick for a second time this month, and you cannot take any more time off because youâve already taken so many personal days this year.
Perhaps, just perhaps, you should have kept your sick kid home the first time. This would have prevented germs from spreading and coming back to your child the second time, and then the third. Perhaps you would be able to stay home this time if youâd stayed home with your kid the first time. Iâm just saying. I know that all situations are unique and sometimes itâs just what happens in life; but you have no right to infect our kids with your kids. Itâs not cool.
So while you have my sympathy, you kind of donât have it at the same time if that makes any sense. I feel for you. I really do, and I can see things from your point of view. Now Iâm asking you to see them from my point of view. When your kid comes to school or practice or wherever sick, my kid will bring home those germs. Perhaps my kid wonât get sick, but I have three more kids to think about, including a set of 18-month-old twins that were born prematurely and havenât quite developing amazing immune systems just yet.
My husband and I do have four kids â and we like to keep them healthy. Life is not fun with sick kids, trust me. I know you know that sick kids are the worst. It breaks your heart, you canât do anything and itâs just miserable. Youâre tired because they are tired, youâre overwhelmed because it is difficult to accomplish anything; I get it. But I have babies that become miserable when they get sick. I have babies that have minor health issues that make a simple cold from your kid turn into a full-blown hospital stay â does that make you feel good about sending your sick kid to school?
And to the mother from my daughterâs cheerleading squad: I donât even know your name (that would be because you drop your kids off alone at practice even when the coach has yet to arrive and you are never there when the rest of us go home after practice so Iâve yet to actually meet you and itâs been three years now) but you might be the worst of the worst sending your daughter to the game last week and to practice this week with giants welts and sores that look potentially like ring worm but could be any kind of nasty skin disease all over her arms and legs. When a child who is only 7-years-old walks up to her friends and her coaches and the other parents (by the way, how very cool of you to drop her off in the parking lot and not even walk her in) and says, âDonât touch me, donât touch me. Iâm contagious,â to everyone; it freaks us out.
How does that seem even remotely appropriate to you? Itâs an extracurricular activity after school hours and on the weekends. You are clearly not at work, yet you donât feel the need to keep your kid home so that she doesnât infect the other 14 girls on her squad with whatever nasty stuff is all over her skin? She was scratching, itching, crying and causing herself to bleed she was so miserable. Where were you? You certainly were not there, and the coaches couldnât get in touch with you.
Thanks. I want to say thank you for bringing your child to school and practice and the game like that. Really, because when my kids get out of bed one morning and have nasty skin lesions all over their bodies, at least Iâll know where it came from. I wonât know what it is, since your daughter informed the entire squad that you did not take her to the doctor because it would eventually âgo away,â.
So, parents with sick kids; join me in the misery that is a school day at home with our whiny, sick children that make us even crazier than usual on those days so that we can keep everyone else healthy. Itâs only fair. Sick kids want their mother; not their classmates.
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