Kids in Hot Cars: Neglect or Not?

Photo Credit: Safe Kids USA http://www.safekids.org/press-release/nhtsa-safe-kids-child-heatstroke

Photo Credit: Safe Kids USA http://www.safekids.org/press-release/nhtsa-safe-kids-child-heatstroke

It’s happening again. Last week – it happened two times in the DC area within days. Last month, 7 kids died in 4 different states within two weeks. It’s a totally preventable, horrific and unnecessary death when parents or caregivers forget a child is in the backseat of a car and the child dies after being left in the heat in a car. It happens every single year, unfortunately.

Several years ago, Gene Weingarten wrote a chilling and incredibly thorough piece on this issue of Kids and Cars in the Washington Post magazine. If you didn’t read it then, I’d encourage you to read it now.

It is a long read and it is a really difficult read. I distinctly remember it took me almost a week because I had to break it up into sections. What he does very well is examine all sides of the issue – in particular the perspective that is so difficult for many of us to accept – HOW CAN THIS BE? Look, if you read my below piece that I wrote back in July 2011, you’ll realize very quickly that I am incredibly firm in my belief that it is neglect on the part of whomever has left this child in the car. Despite those feelings, it’s still important to get a perspective on how the brain functions, how it actually is possible to forget a child. Weingarten’s piece will give you that perspective. The psychologist he interviews pointedly notes that if you’re capable of forgetting your cell phone, you’re capable of forgetting your child.

After re-reading that portion of the interview, I couldn’t help but wonder, if that same sound bite would prove true today. Back in 2009, we weren’t as addicted to our phones as we are now — they weren’t quite so smart — so is it still true?

The other perspective you’ll get from reading the piece is the horrific way a child dies when they are left inside a hot vehicle. One child pulled all her hair out in that process.

That is what I think about when I’m criticized for being judgmental of the parents who forget their kids in the back of the car. How about the kid?

Yet a few months ago, my husband came home one day and said to me “Now I think I can see how someone could forget their kid in the backseat of the car.”

Our youngest had taken to falling asleep in the car, something neither of our kids had really ever done before and we’d moved her up to a booster seat from her convertible car seat. In our Jeep, the way the seats are and the height of the new bigger kid car seat, suddenly it meant that unless you turned the rear view mirror down to deliberately see her – you could no longer see her when looking in that mirror.  In that moment – I knew he was right – for the first time – I could actually realize with my own two eyes how something this horrific could happen.

Even so, I still firmly believe it’s neglect and it’s a crime.

Want to know what else I think? I think that every time a child dies from being left in a hot car, every single one of us needs to slow down and take stock of our own lives. Parsing out the instances where it was a parent deliberately leaving the child, each case shares one common trait – a change in routine, a busy hectic schedule, a tired parent, pulled in too many directions:  a recipe for disaster.

No matter your feelings, no matter where you fall on the spectrum of blame, anger and neglect – we all need to slow down and think about it for a few minutes.

If you want to read more – I’m including the piece I posted back in July 2011 when this was a hot topic in the DC area because of the Virginia mother who left her child in the car. If you read all the way to the end, you’ll appreciate the reminder that it was written a few years ago because I toss in a Casey Anthony reference. Forget about her?

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Every summer stories break that a parent changes his or her routine, forgets to take the child to daycare, instead goes to work and leaves their own child unattended in a hot scorching car for 7 or 8 hours, only to ultimately find the child dead at the end of the work day. It’s a horrible story. It’s a story that no one is comfortable with. But what shocks me every time is how forgiving the public is of these parents who fail to remember their own kid in the back seat of a car all day long.

In Sunday’s Washington Post there was an oped written by Molly Roberts on the recent case of the veterinarian from Virginia who left her child unattended for 7 hours last month and the child died. Sunday’s piece, “A Baby is dead. Was it a crime?”, initially infuriated me. Roberts clearly is very uncomfortable with accusing a seemingly loving mother, a smart educated mother, a mother who is maybe – on paper – like Roberts: smart, focused, driven, successful. Roberts, in her piece,  is unwilling to admit that this mother is guilty of neglect even though she concedes it is neglectful to forget a child in a car because we can’t prove that this woman INTENDED to neglect her child.

Ok – so along the path of keeping our children safe – we’re supposed to look kindly on neglect cases where the parent didn’t actually MEAN to inflict any harm on the child. And in this case, the ultimate worst kind of harm, the death of a child. What does the child say about this? How do we protect the innocent if we allow for neglect when it wasn’t intended?

I think what this story, and the shockingly endless stories like this, is really about is this: we can RELATE to this form of neglect. We are all running around, harried, stretched too thin, with schedules too busy and jam-packed. Our minds are racing, our brains overcrowded with to-do lists and deadlines. We can RELATE to how easy it might be to change-up our schedule and forget something, even something as beloved as our child.

So we don’t feel comfortable prosecuting these grieving parents.  We can’t relate to drug-addicted moms who didn’t mean to leave their pipes lying around for the  kid to pick up and use. We can’t relate to parents who drive drunk with their kids in the back of the car. We can’t relate to parents who leave loaded guns in their homes and the child finds it and uses it. But we CAN relate to busy, over-worked and stressed out parents. So we don’t want to hold  them accountable in the court system because it hits close to home.

I’ll be honest: I don’t relate to it and I find it neglectful. I think they should be prosecuted, no matter the profound level of pain and trauma they feel for their horrible mistake. Am I a perfect parent who never makes mistakes? Of course not. But who goes 7 or 8 hours without thinking of their child? How is this possible? I don’t care how busy your day is and what life-saving miracles you might be performing at work – forgetting a child and leaving them to suffer a horrible experience in the back of a hot car is neglect.

Whether we are comfortable saying it, whether we can relate to how it could happen or not – if a child ends up dead – someone should be accountable for it.  Unless, apparently, you live in the state of Florida and your name is Casey Anthony.

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A Journey to Neverland: Imagination Stage’s Peter Pan & Wendy

I briefly interrupt your lazy summer days to bring you this update on the status of achieving my summer time Bucket List:  I am pleased to report on an excellent trip to Bethesda’s Imagination Stage on July 2. To cut straight to the chase:  me and the girls are giving Imagination Stage’s Peter Pan & Wendy a strong two thumbs up after enjoying the performance last Tuesday morning.

Wendy (Justine Moral) and Peter Pan (Jonathan Atkinson) watch the mermaids in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

Wendy (Justine Moral) and Peter Pan (Jonathan Atkinson) watch the mermaids in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

True mom confession time: I was a little nervous bringing my younger one because while I’ve always enjoyed past Imagination Stage performances, I’ve found them to be a little too long for the younger ones. Not this time!

C’est vrai.

Reason #1 topping the list – and what has long been one of my frustrations with productions at Imagination Stage – this time there was no intermission. I cannot tell you how relieved I was to figure this out around mid-way through the production.

Second, anyone who reads me regularly knows my little one is a hardcore Pirate lover – so the evil Captain Hook and his sidekick Smee easily kept her 4-year-old attention – which is no small feat, as anyone who has a 4-year-old knows. The set is beautifully designed to switch between Wendy’s nursery filled with large blocks and toys, and Neverland, complete with a forest, the Lost Boys and those scheming pirates. Tinkerbelle, much to our surprise, also had a dominant presence in the play, in the form of a twinkling light  that beautifully bounces around the set and pixie dust sound effects.

The fearsome Captain Hook (James Konicek) in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit:  Margot Schulman

The fearsome Captain Hook (James Konicek) in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

Third reason – the show encourages audience participation and actually treats the audience as part of the production, with the characters asking one another what the audience told them to do (hint: the daft Smee especially needs a little lifeline help from audience friends to keep things straight). Kids LOVE to shout and interact – hell – they do it anyway during shows even if it’s not encouraged, so if you can’t beat ’em, you mine as well join ’em, right? Much to their credit, the audience participation flows naturally with the production and doesn’t interfere or make it seem choppy or forced, which is not necessarily something easy to pull off.

The story line itself follows the basic arc of the Peter Pan movie the kids are all used too, which I always appreciate because the kids tend to find comfort in familiarity. The Indian Princess, Tiger Lily, however, has a bigger role in Imagination Stage’s production and she quickly emerged as the fan favorite in our house. My girls adored her costume and are obsessed with recreating it for Halloween: it was the perfect combination of whimsical and feminine with strong and brave (hint: a pack of arrows strapped to your back will lock in the strong and brave brand every time).

The Lost Boys are a pack of 2 in the Imagination Stage production, one is a wolf and the other a very

(L to R) Wendy (Justine Moral), Tootles (Matt Dewberry), Slightly (Dan Van Why), and Peter Pan (Jonathan Atkinson) find a cake in the forest in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

(L to R) Wendy (Justine Moral), Tootles (Matt Dewberry), Slightly (Dan Van Why), and Peter Pan (Jonathan Atkinson) find a cake in the forest in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

funny chipmunk. Speaking of animals, Tick Tock the croc also emerged as a fan favorite in our house, I marveled over her costume and my girls eagerly awaited the croc’s chance to get another taste of the scallywag, Hook.

Here’s my one complaint – the stereotypical gender roles, particularly those reinforced by Peter and Wendy – really annoyed me at times. Did Wendy really need to come in and play the role of “mother” to the Lost Boys? Did she need to be the practical and smart character? Did the boys in the play need to be bumbling and lacking will power, unable to make logical or smart decisions without the guidance of the “mother” figure (in the form of a young girl)? Further, did we need to continue to perpetuate female competition by encouraging Tink’s threatened feelings towards Wendy? I understand these plot lines are carried through the storyline we all are used too – but I couldn’t help but wondered if they really needed to be repeated again. It wasn’t enough to taint my overall reaction to the play but it absolutely annoyed me at times.

Smee (Michael John Casey – front) has met his match in Tiger Lily (Angela Miller) in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

Smee (Michael John Casey – front) has met his match in Tiger Lily (Angela Miller) in PETER PAN AND WENDY at Imagination Stage. Photo Credit: Margot Schulman

Conversely, and probably another reason why Tiger Lily emerged as a strong fan favorite for our group, her role was more evolved and she absolutely represented a strong female character not bound by traditional and frustrating gender stereotypes. If anything, it prompted me to talk further with the girls after the play about what we liked about the characters, what we liked a little less, and why we liked Tiger Lilly so much.

At a running time of about one hour and 15 minutes, we thoroughly enjoyed this musical performance. I would absolutely encourage you to add it to your kid summer bucket list and bring the 4-year-olds without fear that they will grow weary. It’s an excellent production put on by Imagination Stage and now I am off to hunt down Tiger Lily costume options for Halloween, albeit a wee bit early. Catch the show before it ends on August 11. Show times and ticket prices are below.

Show Information:

Peter Pan and Wendy

A musical by Alyn Cardarelli and Steve Goers; directed by Kathryn Chase Bryer.

June 26 – August 11, 2013 Show Schedule:

·         Public performances on Tuesdays-Fridays at 10:30 a.m., Saturdays and Sundays at 1:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m., select Saturdays at 11 a.m.

·         Special Friday night performance on July 12 at 7 p.m.

Tickets: $12 – $25; best for ages 4-10

Disclosure: Imagination Stage provided tickets for me to see the show. My opinions here are all my own.

 

Parenting Humor….A Week’s Perspective in Pictures

What better way to start the week than with a pictures post?

For those with toddlers at home:

For those headed to a beach “vacation” for July 4 this week:, my fav cartoon of all time

For those who think dinner is their albatross (umm….everyone?). Is it me or is dinner more of a hassle in summer?? :

And finally, in case I go missing:

With that, happy July 4 week everyone! “Like” the WM FB page for the most fun you ever did have.

Adventure Theatre MTC’s “Cat in the Hat”: Summer Time Fun at its Best

Rick Hammerly as The Cat, Tyler Herman as The Boy, Jessi...Shearer as Sally. Photo by: Mike Horan

Rick Hammerly as The Cat, Tyler Herman as The Boy, Jessi…Shearer as Sally. Photo by: Mike Horan

image001“It’s fun to have fun but you have to know how,” quips the Cat in the Hat, played by Rick Hammerly, in Adventure Theatre MTC’s sixth and final show in its 2012-2013 season.

As we embark upon summer and head into the July 4th weekend, truer words couldn’t possibly be said. It is fun to have fun, but as parents, do we always know how?

I can tell you that adding this fun-filled 42-minute production to the top of your Summer Bucket List, will help you earn some serious fun chops with the kids.

Me and the girls were lucky to soak the show in last week, on the eve of opening day, and it was a high energy, hilarious and quick-paced production that kept both my 4 and 7-year-old’s attention for the duration. Sometimes a play based off a book deviates from the book and it works – or it doesn’t – but it can disappoint the kids because we know they like consistency and familiarity. This particular production parallels the book perfectly, so the kids will know what to expect but because it’s happening live in front of them, it keeps them enraptured and engaged the entire time. Sally and her brother are outfitted just as you see them in the book, and I really enjoyed not just their penchant for physical comedy but their perfectly timed facial expressions to match the frolic and chaos happening throughout the show.

Alison Cenname as Thing 1 and Cassie Cope as Thing 2. Photo by: Mike Horan

Alison Cenname as Thing 1 and Cassie Cope as Thing 2. Photo by: Mike Horan

Rick Hammerly is absolute perfection as the Cat in the Hat – between his timing, his inflection and his own facial expressions. My girls, especially my oldest, absolutely loved seeing child actors in the play, of course playing Thing 1 and Thing 2, and Alex Vernon plays the puppet fish exceptionally well.

Beyond the lovely set and outstanding costumes, the use of sound effects and the bubbles particularly appealed to the younger ones in the audience. If you have a hardcore bubble lover amongst your brood, I’d suggest sitting in the middle front row, unless of course your bubble lover can’t control herself and will want to jump up and pop all the bubbles, then I’d suggest sitting on the sides, towards the back, to avoid temptation….

Adventure Theatre MTC recommends this show for all ages and as many of you know,

Alex Vernon as The Fish, Jessica Shearer as Sally. Photo by: Mike Horan

Alex Vernon as The Fish, Jessica Shearer as Sally. Photo by: Mike Horan

often times I’ll disagree with their recommendations and suggest a child skew slightly older before you bring them, but not this time. I’d be comfortable even bringing someone as young as 2 or 2.5 to this show because it is so quick paced and relies on physical comedy – not a lot of dialogue. In short – it is a perfect, fun summer production, to escape the heat or in the case of Sally and her brother, do something fun on a rainy day.

On that note, my friend commented towards the end of the production that what they did exceptionally well was recreate the total chaos of what the inside of her house looks like after a rainy day — truer words couldn’t have been said.

Tickets are $19 each and you have until September 2 to enjoy the show. I hear tickets are selling fast and I can understand why. After the show, we enjoyed an evening carousel ride on the lovely Merry-Go-Round in Glen Echo Park and barely dodged an extended park visit. It’s always a treat heading to Adventure Theatre and Glen Echo Park – an easy way to pass a lazy summer day!

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Disclosure: I was invited as a guest of the final dress rehearsal of this production. My opinions here are all my own.