When the car is quiet...

When the car is quiet…

This is going to be my most serious post to date. There will probably not be one joke. It is taking quite a bit of courage for me to write this and include my own confessions, but having had these experiences compels me to share them and to help my fellow mommy and daddy friends learn about this problem and how to avoid it.

Years ago I saw an Oprah episode that included an interview with a mother who had forgotten that her daughter was in the car. She drove to work and got out of her car, leaving her daughter there asleep in her seat. Her daughter tragically died that day. It was horrific. How on earth does that happen, I wondered. The mother explained that it occurs too often when there is a break in routine. She almost never drove her daughter to day care in the morning — her husband always did — but he had a dentist appointment that day so it was her job. Despite the fact that she had loaded her daughter into her seat minutes earlier, she quickly forgot about her and drove straight to work as was her normal routine. It was impossible for me (on that day) to imagine that this could ever happen. And it didn’t happen with my first child.

There was no “routine” to break with baby #1. I was a typical first time parent — my every thought, every breath was consumed with my new son. I would never forget he was in the car, even when he was sound asleep, as my “routine” was to coexist with a baby, whether it was in the car, house, etc.

Two years later I had forgotten about this Oprah episode and now found myself with a chatty 2-year old and a newborn. It had been 2 years since I had driven around with a sleepy baby in the car. One day I was out doing errands with only the baby and had left my toddler at home with Daddy. This was a break in my “routine” as my car was never quiet anymore. I came home and entered the house, leaving her asleep in the car. I FORGOT she was in the car. After about 20 seconds of chatting with my husband in the kitchen, he asked if I was going to get her. My heart dropped into my stomach. What if I had forgotten while we were at the store? Thank goodness — no THANK GOD — I didn’t. And THANK GOD it was winter and she would not have baked in the heat. And THANK GOD my husband was home, not out somewhere with our son, or when would I have realized? I believe I would have remembered within seconds, but I will never know.

That day shook me to my core. I left her alone in the car for no more than 20 seconds, in our garage. The point was that I had forgotten she was in the car. I was so used to a 2-year old voice and a 2-year old face looking back at me through the rearview mirror that without him there, the car seemed empty. I vowed to never forget again and I believed at the time that I never would.

Now that little girl is a talkative 2-year old herself and my son is 4. I now have 2 faces looking back at me through the mirror and 2 voices chatting my ear off in the car. And we have another newborn. Last week I went to a doctor’s appointment with him and left the big kids home with Grandpa. On the way there, I recalled this exact incident and said to myself, “Of course I won’t forget. I am heading to the OB — the doctor who delivered him, whose office is in the same building as the hospital where was born.” But not a few minutes later, my mind was onto other things and by the time I pulled in the parking lot, I had forgotten. Again. I took about 5 steps away from my car before remembering he was still in it. I frantically looked around as I turned around to go back for him — was anyone watching this horrible unfit mother who FORGOT her kid go back to retrieve him? I could not believe it had happened again.

Again, the whole incident was seconds long. And thankfully I remembered on my own. But it could have been so much worse. I truly thank God for both of these minor but also terrifying incidents. I believe they are both gifts sent down to teach me a valuable lesson. It truly can happen to anyone.

To the handful of parents who I know are reading this, especially if you are having your second or third child and are used to loud kids in the car, KNOW your routine. KNOW how tired you can get, how distracted your mind can become thinking of a 100 things. I have taken a pledge to myself and to my kids. EVERY TIME I am driving alone with the baby, I am going to put my purse in the back with him. I would never leave my car without my purse, so this will force me to look for it and remember he is back there. I have also heard the suggestion of keeping a teddy bear in the front seat to remind the driver. There are already teddy bears and dolls all over my car, so this probably would not help me much. But find something that works for you.

I feel sick telling this story but I am also incredibly grateful for the opportunity to share. If that mother, who accidentally caused the death of her daughter had the courage to go on national television and tell her story in order to educate others, I can at least share mine. Summer is coming and it is 106 degrees for 3 straight months where I live. It takes only a couple of minutes for a baby to die from the heat inside a parked car in the summer.

I pledge to never text and drive.
And I pledge to keep my purse in the back when I am alone with the baby in the car.
What do you pledge?

10 thoughts on “When the car is quiet…

  1. What a brave post! Putting yourself out there for people to judge isn’t easy. I applaud your honesty and the purse idea is great! I no longer have young children but there are always grandchildren. Everyone is so busy rushing around, trying to get all thing done, it’s no wonder it happens. Even decades ago when mine were young, it was hard to keep everything straight. My toddler son got out the front door one time when I was in the shower, same floor, for maybe 30 seconds and he was happily playing with toys and when I went to check on him, gone. He had figured out how to unlock the front door. I think most moms have horror stories about things like this and thankfully, yours and mine ended with no sad ending. You may save a life, you never know. Thanks for posting this!!

    1. Thanks for your comments, Mary! Hopefully at least one person reads it and realizes it can happen to her too and she takes some preventative steps. So heart breaking when this happens every summer.

  2. Thank you so much for sharing. This is one of my greatest fears…

    1. Me too, now that I know it can happen to me. Hope it makes at least one person realize it can happen to her too and to take some precautionary steps. I am so heart broken every summer when I hear about kids dying in hot cars on the news.

  3. Sheri says:

    So honest, so brave, and so fortunate that these incidents did not end in harm. I applaud you for putting it out there – both your judgement of the mom on Oprah and your forgetting they were in the car, yourself. God be with the babies now in heaven and the parents with whom the feeling of guilt lie.

    1. Thank you! It was not easy to admit that this happened, but what I realized is how EASILY it happens. Hopefully someone will read it and take an extra step to be careful.

  4. jenny says:

    How brave of you to put this out there and share with others just how easily it can happen. I have heard of the left shoe trick. When putting baby in the back, rake you left shoe off and place next to baby seat. You need that shoe when you get out!

    1. That’s the best trick I’ve heard. I hope more people do “tricks” like that and stop thinking it will never happen to them. Thanks for commenting!

  5. Margie Kennard says:

    Another sad part of these accidental infant deaths is that statistically most of them occur in September and October! I was shocked when I read that. Think about it. That’s the time parents are busy with back to school, Halloween, early holiday shopping! They are busy, distracted and tired!
    Please checkout Little Helper ( Walmart online $50.) It’s like insurance, it sends a
    notice to your phone if you have left the baby in the carseat. We are all human and do crazy things when tired and distracted. I do not want to learn that this happened again when we now have technology to help us remember.

    1. Margie Kennard says:

      It’s called Driver’s Little Helper. Also works on booster seats. Checkout driverslittlehelper.com. The holiday season is already upon us judging by Halloween and Thanksgivings items for sale in stores! Let’s keep everyone safe and happy as the holidays approach us!

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