I left my baby in the car by accident - I don't know how I did it
"My husband arrived at the party and looked across the room at me. He mouthed the words, 'Where's the baby?'," an Australian mum writes exclusively for Kidspot.
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I never thought I was capable of accidentally leaving my baby in the car, and then it happened.
To this day, I feel sick to my stomach thinking about what could have been.
I was running late for one of our older children’s friend’s birthday parties and was feeling tired and stressed.
My four-year-old was whinging when we arrived at the party and my son was in a mood as well. Meanwhile my baby had fallen asleep in her car seat.
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"I was on autopilot"
I got the four-year-old out and had her on one hip with the present in the other hand as I headed into the house, at the same time coaxing my son inside. I was on autopilot.
I was in there chatting to some of the other mums when my husband arrived a few minutes after me.
He looked across the room and mouthed the words, “Where’s the baby?”
I will never forget the terror I felt in that moment.
I was extremely sleep deprived and I honestly couldn’t remember whether I had brought her inside the house in her capsule or not. I ran straight out to the car and there she was. Still breathing. Still sound asleep.
I cried and cried and felt like the most negligent mother on the planet.
How could I have left her?
RELATED: Hack to never forget a baby in a hot car
"So many what ifs..."
The other mothers were kind and reassured me that my baby was okay, but all I could think about were the ‘what ifs’.
What if it was a hotter day?
What if my husband hadn’t arrived and asked where the baby was?
How could I be so distracted that I forgot the most precious thing in my life?
There is absolutely no excuse for intentionally leaving a baby, child or animal in a vehicle unattended. When I’d heard of it happening unintentionally, I had wondered how on earth you could forget your child? I now understand that it can happen.
How to avoid leaving a child in a car
According to Kidsafe, every year in Australia, over 5,000 children are rescued after being left unattended in a car. Over the past five years, 10 children were reported to have died after being left in hot cars in Australia.
On a typical Australian summer’s day, the temperature inside a parked car can reach 20 to 30 degrees hotter than the outside temperature.
What’s truly frightening is that 75% of the temperature rise occurs within the first 5 minutes. Large cars heat up just as fast as smaller ones.
It’s hard to admit I made such an epic mistake, but by sharing this, I hope it’s a reminder to other sleep-deprived parents to always check, particularly with the warmer months on the horizon.
Better Health Channel offers the following tips to avoid fatal distraction:
- Open the back door of the car every time you park, even if there is no one in the back seat
- Place a child's bag or cuddly toy in the front seat as a reminder
- Leave a bag, phone or wallet in the back seat of the car
- Use a mirror for rear-facing car seats
- Create a mental list of things to check each time you leave the car, for example, ‘baby, keys, wallet and phone’
- Install electronic controls that create an audio reminder.
"Never again"
From that day on, I made it a habit to check in the rear-view mirror, then physically turn my body and check for my baby every single time I stopped the car.
I will never forgive myself for what I did and I know there is no excuse for it.
I just hope that others don’t make the same mistake and end up paying the ultimate price.
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Originally published as I left my baby in the car by accident - I don't know how I did it