These past weeks, I’ve been talking to a couple of friends.
One of who has a child who’s been sick a lot, and one of whom has one that
hadn’t ever been sick for his entire one year. God bless that little guy BTW…
mine decided to go by the book and have 8 colds in the first year of her life.
Nebuliser/baby inhaler and everything. That’s the kind of textbook child I
could do without, thank you very much!
Regardless of whether you’re used to it or not though, sick
kids are hard. No, I’m not talking about the major illnesses, thank the lord.
These are the smaller trouble like sniffles and fevers and allergies and
teething ails (for parents, lest you get carried away and think we’re worried
about the kid ;)). God, I couldn’t even imagine anything worse, and have humongous
amount of respect for parents who handle that!
When kids, especially babies and toddlers, are ill, the
major challenge is the guessing game. Because, most often, they can't tell you
what’s wrong and its up to you to figure it out. God bless the medical system
in Canada, but at best it’s rushed. Going in there with a vague wondering and a
screaming child is going to get you on THAT list. You know the one… it just
might bump you up in the line though!
I find it’s much, much easier when you seriously watch your
child and figure out a few symptoms. Is he arching his back? Gas? Is she
grabbing her ears? Ear infection? Sniffles? Cold? You get my drift. Decide
based on that if its home remedy time and quickly stuff the appropriate one in
right quantities up or down accurate orifice!
Its really hard when the little b^ggers are yelling and even
an attempts-to-be-flippant mom like
me will tell you its heart wrenching when they are miserable and you can’t do a
bl00dy thing about it. So… put down what you’re thinking maybe? And if you’re
lucky enough to have a significant other who not only cares but also is a
competent parent (I am, knock on wood), run over it together. It’s amazing what
the tired mind will miss/conjure up. I’m guessing you’ve figured out how tired
you’ll be if you’ve had a sick kid. I’ve had everything from her only sleeping
on my chest while I reclined at an awkward 120 degree angle (reflux) to not letting
go of my hair (weird family habit that manifests itself especially when she’s
sick and insecure).
Once you think you have a few symptoms down and its serious
enough to have a quasi-competent conversation with a human being, what next?
Here’s what I do… I splash out for alternative medical care. We have a
naturopathic doctor for our daughter. Agonized over the decision and researched
the sh!t out of it (gotta love the Google age). Found that here in Ontario,
naturopathic doctors are meant to have to go through 4 years of training, like
mainstream doctors, in order to be able to call themselves that. That made me
call a few and we found one. Most will give you a 15 min phone consult for
free. Best decision we ever made… that and Montessori early learning, but
that’s another post.
Alternative medicine for the most part looks at things
holistically. You have to fill out long forms that ask you about everything
from the wart on your grandma’s left cheek to what you were wearing when your
waters broke. Ok, ok I’m lying; it’s not quite as random. Though it may feel
like at times. But there’s a method to their madness. Further, they have
longer, fully paid for appointments, which means it’s less rushed and they’re
better able to spot potential issues. And lastly, call me crazy for going into
this, I’ll have a hundred arguments… but to my mind, alternative medicine with
its herbs and its massages and its tissue salts and its needles seems a lot
more benign that stuffing a bunch of chemicals into a tiny body.
Does it work? Well it has for my little girl. Most
importantly it helped us spot issues like a milk allergy, which had been
bothering her for a year. The difference in her was miraculous! To the point
that a good bit of our family, including some die hard naysayers have come
around to the treatment method. I know I have. It’s helped my migraines and
reflux. So I believe.
This is not a pitch for naturopathy, just so I’m clear. It’s
me sharing with you what’s worked for me. And asking you to open your minds to
options. Because in this long journey to adulthood (the child, not you silly
;)) you’re going to need all the help you can get.