She had only had the sniffles probably once in her life previous. The first year of school she missed a month, spread out over 5 or 6 illnesses. |
That's how my Jake was his first year of school. He was a pretty healthy kid before he started kindergarten, but then he started public school and got strep throat 3 times in the year, missing a week every time and being really quite ill.
I hate to be a snot (yuck yuck yuck), but I know people whose kids are always sniffling, school or not. A friend of the family's kid was taking cough syrup and nose medicine almost constantly before he started school. |
Har har.....
There's something not right with that scenario. If a kid has to take cold meds and cough syrup almost constantly then I'd have thought a trip to the doctor would have been warranted. thye might have a bacterial infection that needs treating, or their immune system might be compromised in some way.....either way, it's just not normal to be ill like that all the time.
My house isn't "clean", not by a longshot, but I have to wonder how in the hell these people manage to keep breeding these bugs. |
Our house isn't sterile. It's not filthy, it's just lived in, and whilst I can practice infection control here (spraying the door handles down with lysol and disinfecting surfaces etc etc) it does no good if the kids are spending most of their days with kids whose homes are bacterial breeding grounds.
Nice people, nice houses, far wealthier than me, and their kids are always sneezing on my daughter at school. I'm sick of it. |
I know the feeling. My sons friend has parents who both work full time. Davey's always talking about what this kid has...big screen TV, brand new vehicles, name brand shoes and clothes....but will this kids mother take a day off when her son has a cold so he doesn't infect his classmates? No.....because she can't afford to. In order to maintain the lifestyle she's so proud of her kids having she has to work all day, every day. There's no time for illnesses.
Personally, I'd rather have a used car, a 32" TV, no-name clothes and healthy kids. That's what's REALLY important to me.