A few minutes later we heard a loud crack and ran in to find Liesel face down on the floor. Brent swept her up in his arms and I was relieved to see there was no broken nose and no bloody mouth. We returned to the kitchen and Brent put her back in her high chair. It wasn't until then we saw the ginormous goose egg emerging from her forehead. I just about went into labor right then and there as my biggest motherhood fears were realized. Brent and I went into a flurry of activity putting away our enchilada stuff, throwing on clothes, putting together an ice pack, grabbing Liesel's medical records, keys, wallets and gathering what was left of our composure to try and remember the fastest route to Children's Hospital. You may not be able to see it very well, but the bump takes up half of her forehead and the picture doesn't do the bruising justice. Really, she looked horrible. We were a tornado of activity around her as she tenderly touched it while sobbing "boo boo?" The pleading look in her eyes seemed to ask us if she'd done something wrong. It absolutely broke my heart.
Now I'm sure there are many veteran mothers out there who are rolling their eyes at me. Logically I know toddlers often get head injuries. They're new to walking and don't understand their boundaries yet. Their bodies heal faster than an adults does and head injuries swell like crazy. One of my good friends once told me "kids bounce" and her MD friend told her when kids are really injured it's more likely abuse than a simple accident. However, being pregnant I'm particularly sensitive to children in pain and seeing my own girl with something that HUGE and already bruising on her head will undoubtedly keep me uptight for weeks to come. As if sitting in the emergency room isn't stressful enough, I found myself surrounded by sick and injured children and the thought that any of them had been abused made me want to bawl my eyes out. Perhaps by the time Liesel's little sister is old enough to take a dive onto a hardwood floor I'll be more calloused, but for now I reserve the right to panic.
At Children's I repeatedly asked any official person who would listen to me if I was over-reacting and they all said no, it was a pretty bad bump and it was a good thing we brought her in. Three hours, a $50 copay and $9 in parking later we had instructions to keep an eye on Liesel and she was happily singing BINGO in her car seat. We're still not sure what happened, but something must have tied her up for her to make a fall like that. We put her to bed, finished the enchiladas and sat down completely exhausted. Not that it was all horrible. I had to laugh at how the guy at the check-in desk wrote Brent's name on his tag. I still can't decide what it says... Whtehuher? Wluiehulner? Unxehuher? Whatever it is, I sound like I have a hair ball in my throat when I try to pronounce it. In any case, I think we'll be focusing a bit more on keeping our little monkey from falling off the bed.