
As a mom, I want to protect my baby, protect him from what's present and protect him from the future. I want to save his innocents and keep him away from hurt.
But we all know that life doesn't work that way. We can't hide our children from experiencing what life is and we don't want to shelter them from living. So how do we protect them and what do we protect them from? Are we doing more harm than good from keeping them overly protected? Or do we teach them resilience by letting them fall down and simply being there to help them to get up?
Children are resilient, probably more than we are as adults. Perhaps this is because they don't hold the same fears we do, or that they trust more, give more freely and accept what is.

Of course, Braden will feel pain whether or not he had this hospital experience. He will feel pain when he falls and scrapes his knee. He will feel pain when a toy is taken away from him by a friend, when he hears no after he asks for a second helping of ice cream, when he misses Daddy because he's been away for so long or when he experiences his first heartbreak. As a mother, I want to protect him. But my job is not necessarily to prevent the pain, it's to help him through it and help him prepare for it.
And so that's what I did. I prepared Braden for his hospital experience. I shared with him what would happen, what to expect, and how it might feel before and after the surgery. I did my best to hold it together and provide a sense of confidence as he went through it. It wouldn't have been, after all, fair if I put my fears onto Braden. This was his experience, his story to create, his feelings to have. I only wanted to provide a solid foundation for him to feel safe.
I think, or I hope anyway, that he walked away from this experience feeling protected.
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