How would you react? Would you know what to do?
A choking three-year-old is strapped in to his car seat. His frantic mother is driving on a busy road. Panicked she pulls over, trying anything, everything to save her child’s life.
Would you know what to do? Would you know how to save the life of your child?
New Zealand mother-of-four Tracey Kaminski has written of her terrifying ordeal on Friday when her three-year-old son choked on a lollipop while sitting in the backseat of her car.
He had been sucking on a round lollipop on a stick when the stick came detached and the hard candy lodged in his throat.
Tracey wrote that she was travelling in heavy traffic with her three-year old son when she heard a strange noise from the backseat.
“I turned to see him struggling, his eyes were bulging wide and screaming help me mum and his mouth was wide open gasping for a breath,” she posted on her Facebook page.
“His lollipop had come off the stick and was stuck solidly in his throat, my baby boy couldn’t breathe.”
She told The New Zealand Herald “He was struggling, his face was going red, his eyes were bulging and he was looking at me like ‘help me, help me’. I went into a panic.”
“I pulled him out of his seat, hit his back, put my fingers down his throat, tipped him upside down. Nothing was working.”
Top Comments
I am very glad that this story has a happy ending, and am grateful for the Good Samaritan who stopped to assist.
However, this line in the article bothers me:
"But then a woman – a blonde mother herself..."
Does the colour of the woman's hair mean anything? What relevance does it have to the rest of the story, or her ability to assist in this emergency situation? I thought that Mamamia focused on women's achievements, not on their appearance. Does this mean that 'blonde' female doctors, nurses, educators, scientists, politicians, and many more in other professions, have less credibility than their raven-haired, brunette or ginger counterparts, because they are blonde. I certainly don't feel like that, but perhaps others do.
I found this odd too but I wonder if it was just an autocorrect gone wrong?
I think, as the article is about finding this woman that if these are two facts we know about her it is worth mentioning as a means of identification not just labels :)
I think it was mentioned as she is looking for this woman so any detail might help. A friend or family member may recognise the description of a blonde mother of a 10 yr old and reach out to them.
I think she means that she is a blonde haired mother like herself,or of similar looks and age.
Cried reading this! Thank God for that woman! I will certainly not be giving my son a lollipop anytime soon!