Monday, January 30, 2017

The Bandaid Fairy

My father has guest authored before and it's time to invite his musing once again...Josie got a flu shot and had a bandaid she REFUSED to let us remove. Unfortunately she is too young for the Bandaid Fairy but I will delight in the opportunity to share this special creature with her.

 The Bandaid Fairy
by Peter "Grampy" Krause

When they were little, my kids used to love bath time, and that was a favorite time for me to be with them.  They liked the warm water, the gentle washcloth and the floating toys.  Being dried off was fun also, and we would sing a song I made up called "Dipeys and Jammys".  We all loved the innocent, sensuous feelings and special closeness associated with bath time.  This was especially true with my older daughter, until... one day...

Jaimie had a booboo on her leg and we had put a bandaid on it.  This bandaid stayed on for over a week, because Jaimie wouldn't let us remove it.  Whenever we would try, she would pull away.  She was five years old and she was smart, strong and clever; and there was no way she would sit still for us to pull off that appendage.  She already knew that it would hurt, and nothing we said could change her mind.  But she trusted me, and so, during her bath, when I was kneeling outside the tub, she let me put my hands near it because she had secured my promise not to pull the bandaid off.  But I did it anyway.  Jaimie screamed and then she wouldn't talk to me.  Period.  I had no excuse.  As far as Jaimie was concerned, I had broken my word, and was never to be trusted again.  Then, I had an idea.

When Jaimie woke up the next morning, she had two dollar bills under her pillow and a note from the Bandaid Fairy.  The note explained how proud the Fairy was that Jaimie was so brave about having the bandaid pulled off, and that not all little girls or boys would have been so good and so smart about the need to change the bandaid to let the booboo get better.  The Fairy said she would be watching in the future to see if Jaimie was just as brave when it came time to remove another bandaid.

Jaimie was absolutely delighted with this note and her gift.  This was her first "good fairy" experience, since she had not yet had occasion to meet the Tooth Fairy.  We never had a problem with her bandaid removal after that.  She usually did it herself.  And each time, there would be a note from the Bandaid Fairy, written by mom or dad, and usually accompanied by a dollar.

All good things, they say, must come to an end, and there came a point when Jaimie was eight, that she received her last visit from the Bandaid Fairy.  The Fairy left two dollars and a card (penned by my wife) saying how proud she was that Jaimie was now a big girl and didn't need the Fairy any more for the bandaids; but there were other little boys and girls who did.  Even though she wouldn't be writing any more notes or leaving any more gifts, the Bandaid Fairy would always keep an eye on Jaimie in case Jaimie needed her.

Actually, the Bandaid Fairy did make one more appearance in our house, for Jaimie's younger sister.  Neither my wife nor I can figure out who did it.

The author and the babe

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