Rules and Risk-taking
“OW! Mary, my foot is hurting me!”
Some kids are just so damned cute when they cry! Emily’s already large brown eyes become enormous, glimmering with tears, the little pink lip protrudes endearingly, and perfect round tears roll in glittering lines down the perfect roundness of her peachy-cream cheeks. No red blotches, no scroodged-up face, no snot, no red-rimmed eyes. Just 100% adorable pathos. And she’s earned a bit of pathos. I’d wondered this morning if her sandals weren’t just a smidge too small… That’s one big blister she’s got on her heel.
I put a bandaid on it.
“Do you want to put your sandals back on, sweetie, or would you prefer to walk home barefoot?”
“Barefoot, please.”
Simon is appalled.
Simon (a previous daycare client, now six) is with us this week, filling the week gap between the end of school and the beginning of his summer camp. Simon, sweet, earnest Simon, comes from a risk-phobic family, where Rules of Safety are many and strictly enforced. (Too bad rules about Eating Your Vegetables and Getting Sufficient Sleep are not equally rigorously enforced. In fact, it would be a far better use of parental energy, says I, if they tossed about 70% of the Safety Rules and applied that diligence to the nutrition and sleep fronts. Snark, snark, snark.)
Simon, as I said, is appalled.
“She can’t go BAREFOOT!!!” We are threatening to trangress a Rule of Safety!!! “When we’re outside, we wear shoes.” In fact, Simon’s mother provides shoes for use in the house. Toddlers do not wear shoes in Mary’s house. Thunder-footed six-year-olds most definitely do not wear shoes. They wear slippers, or they wear bare feet. Shoes are LOUD, and we all know how Mary feels about LOUD. Simon has been barefoot this week, but only in the house.
“Why, Simon? What might happen if she goes barefoot?” My tone is mild. I’m curious as to his thoughts on the matter, and I’m pushing an agenda here. Let’s evaluate the risk, shall we?
“A car might run over her toes!”
He looks mildly offended at my shout of laughter. I try not to snort as I explain.
“Simon, honey. If a car were to run over her toes, I don’t think those little sandals would be any help at all.”
“But she can’t go BAREFOOT!!!”
“Why not? Let’s think about this. What might happen if she goes barefoot?”
“She might step on a rock!”
“Yes, she might. She might stub her toe, too.”
“Or a spider might bite her!”
“I think that’s less likely, but okay, maybe. Now. What will happen if she wears her sandals?”
“A spider won’t bite her!!!” He thinks he’s got me there.
“A spider could still bite her on the leg. But Simon, think about Emily’s blister. What will happen if she wears her sandals?”
“Her blister will hurt her?”
“YES! My blister will hurt and get bigger and hurt me MORE!” Emily, who is getting nervous about the direction this conversation is taking, wants him to be Perfectly Clear on this point.
“So what do you think, Simon? If she goes barefoot, she MIGHT step on a rock, or stub her toe, or even, maybe, get bitten by a spider. But if she wears her sandals, she WILL get a big, sore blister, even worse than she has already.”
Emily whimpers. I whisper words of reassurance in her ear.
“Now, Simon. If you had to choose between MAYBE stepping on a rock, and FOR SURE getting a giant blister, which would you choose?”
Simon’s answer is slow and reluctant. “I wouldn’t want a bliiiiiister.”
“No, I bet you wouldn’t. Neither does Emily. That’s why she’s not going to wear her sandals any more.”
Emily sighs with relief.
“But Emily? You gots to be VERY CAREFUL where you put your feet! You can’t step on any rocks or sticks or spiders!”
Emily, a sensible girl, gives him The Look. “Simon, I am not a big silly. I am not going to step on rocks in my bare feet.”
And she didn’t.
Has Simon learned anything about evaluating risks, or has he learned only that Mary is a wild and reckless woman? I’m not sure, but we’ll be optimistic, we shall, and call it One Strike for Freedom for Simon.
June 29, 2009 Posted by MaryP | Emily, health and safety | accepting risk, bare feet, blisters, evaluating risk, risk, risk-taking, toddlers | 9 Comments
About
A childcare provider is expected to be a superhuman mix of the Madonna and Mary Poppins, ever patient, loving, kind, always delighting in the sweetness of her charges. I don’t do such a bad job, all in all, and it’s far more likely the parents than the children who strain my sanity most days. But I’m here to tell you: It’s Not ALL Mary Poppins…
If you wish to contact me, my email is notmaryp at gmail dot com
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