I have been a father for about five and a half years.  I have two wonderful kids who I love very much.  The one question that I have asked myself over and over again as a parent is…..what is going inside the head of my children?

Now I am not stupid, I know that babies don’t have the ability to think as we do –  but what would they be thinking if they did have a developed language?  I know this is not a new idea.  There is a 1989 film that brought this idea to life in the movie Look Who’s Talking. But it is one of the first things I ask myself  when I see a new little baby.

The time that I really wanted to know what a baby was thinking happened during the summer of 2005.  As a part of my training to become a pastor I had to spend a summer as a chaplain in a hospital setting.  Now I have to be honest with you – before I started this experience I was trying to do everything I could NOT to actually be in the hospital.  Before my Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) experience I had only bad experiences in hospitals and I was not sure how I would handle the summer.

I ended up going to Cooper Hospital in Camden, NJ.  This hospital met many of my requirements.  First I could get to it by public transportation.  This was important because at the time we only had one car.   Another thing I liked about this program was that I could do half of my CPE experience in the hospital and half could be in the community serving in another capacity.

Anyway, I got to the hospital and my the group of others that I would be spending my time with for the entire summer.  We did some training and then we had to choose which department we would be in for the summer.  I ended up in the pediatric unit and the psychiatric unit.

Well back to the point of this post…….

I want to share two of the many experiences that really impacted me that summer.

The first had to do with a baby less than a year old.  The baby was sick,  not injured and she needed fluids and antibiotics.  She was in the hospital for about 2 weeks.  The one thing that stuck out in my mind during her hospital stay was that I did not ONCE see her parents, or any other family member.  I can’t remember how she got to the hospital or how she left (I assume her parents did that).  But I would visit her everyday and I would talk with her and hold her little hand and sometimes I would cry with her.  Babies that young need constant care and attention and I thought that I could give her some of that when I could. I knew that the nurses were doing their best at spending time with her as well but they were caring for many, many children at the same time.

I also prayed for/with her.  Now this brought up some issues in my group because I was making assumptions about the faith practices of this baby and the family that she belongs too.  Since I did not have any information about a faith practice and I did not have anyone to talk with about about it, I thought it was okay to pray for the wellness of this baby and for the family unit.  But the question that was posed to me was “is it appropriate for me to impose my faith on someone who is not old enough to choose their own faith?”  I still wrestle with that question because I am not sure how to answer it.  I am making that choice for my own children but do I have a right to do that with a complete stranger?  Would I be offending the baby (or more likely the family) by praying with this baby?

My answer is no -

I say that because  I was praying for her health and wellness, but I say that with a slight hesitation…….  I can see the other side of the argument as well but if I had the opportunity to do back and do it all over again I would still make the same choice.

The other baby that will forever have an imprint on my heart came to the hospital because of an accident.  She was the same age as my son at the time.  I walked into the situation about 15 min after the baby came to the hospital.  Doctors and nurses worked on the baby for awhile but they could not bring her back to life.  This was my first experience with the death of a child.  It was worse for me because my son was the same age and I could not stop myself from imagining him in the same situation.  I went home that night and I held Logan so tight telling him over and over again that I loved him.

I was glad to be there on one hand because I was able to be a support for the parents and the hospital staff.  I talked with them, cried with them, and tried to listen to them and talk with them as they asked the unanswerable questions.

Besides my own upbringing, I feel these experiences have had a significant impact on how I am as a father.  I have realized from them the importance of contact with my children and cherishing every moment I have with them.  I don’t have a constant fear of them getting hurt or dying.  But I do appreciate all the time I have with them.  They are going to be young for so long and then I will lose them to teenageism, collegeishness, and adulthood.

What do babies think about?  I don’t know – what I do know is that we can learn from babies just as much as anybody else.

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This entry is Round 4 of the Blog-Off for Babies, a contest between bloggers to benefit the March of Dimes. Click on the logo above to see all the participants and read more about this contest.

Welcome to Round Two of the series Blog-off for Babies sponsored by Nathan. Here is the topic…

You are allowed, through the miracles of science, to travel into the past for a span of no more than 24 hours.   You are allowed to take with you ONE piece of current modern technology with which you may change the lives of ONE family that you can visit during your stay.   Assuming that there are no long-term, widespread disastrous outcomes from this altering of the  time line, when and where would you go, what piece of technology would you take with you to leave with them and why, and what do you think the experience would be like?

You must choose a time of at least 1909 or earlier to return to.   You must be able to physically carry or roll the item along with you.   Be aware that it has to actually work with the other resources they have — IE: they won’t have the Internet, so email isn’t going to work.   Etc.

There are a few things that have run through my mind when this topic came to my inbox late Sunday evening.  I first thought of Back to the Future series….In Back to the Future I; Marty McFly went from the year  1985 to 1955.  After he arrived in 1955 he stumbled into a relationship with his mother (who at the time was the same age as he was) he proceeded to mess up the soon to be relationship between  his parents.  He spent the rest of the movie repairing the damage that he had done.  In Back to the Future II Marty McFly brought back with him to 1955 was a sports atlas that told him the winners and losers of all major sporting events for the next 50 years.   This got me thinking…….Would I want to bring something like that back with me?  Imagine the possibilities!!!  I am not a gambler by any stretch of the imagination, I might buy a scratch card once or twice a month at most, but I might start if I had a guarantee of success!!

Then I started to think about the outcome of the movie —  If you saw it then  you would know that things did not work out so well because the atlas got into the wrong hands.

So back to the drawing board…..I began to think again…..if I was to help one family would it be selfish to help my own family?  Would I want to try and help them out so that generation, after generation would not have to worry about the future anymore?

I then had to do some research to find out what was happening in the early 1900′s to see how we could take advantage of the situation.

1900-1909 there were major advances in all areas of society, the Wright Brothers were starting to fly, cars were being driven and Ping Pong was the latest craze.

The question posed before us is what piece of modern technology would I want to take back that would change the lives of one family.

For me modern technology is something that enhances our lives.  Modern technology is not to be prohibitive but enhanced.  This past April when my iphone was fried because of water being dumped on it and I felt lost.  I used my iphone everyday keeping track of my calendar, to do list, contacts, budget, just to name a few.   After my iphone was destroyed I felt lost, I did not have a sufficent replacement for my iphone and many things slipped between the cracks because I was not “on top” of things.

With all of that in mind, I suppose I have two answers to the question posed before us……the first is that I would bring  back one thing that I would know inside and out (ie a fan, washer and dryer, modern telephone, ipod, pencil sharpener, digital camera, battery charger, tape, cd ect).  I would choose one of the items and teach a family member one of these items and let them “invent” the items and keep the patten on it (granted that I could convince a distant relative that I was from the future and that I was related to him/her, but that is just details).  Then (in theory) my family would be set up for life which would benefit us and in turn, ME!

The other option would be to break the “rules” of this question.  I was really thinking about it and decided that if I could go back in time I would bring with me one thing — it would be a digital camera with lots of extra batteries and SD cards.  I would spend 24 hours going back to February 4th 1930 – the day my father was born.  I would spend 24 hours in the hospital taking pictures (in ninja like fashion) of my father and his biological parents.  See my father was adopted and we really don’t have pictures of his parents.  I would spend the 24 hours talking with his parents (maybe disguised as the hospital priest) and I would try and get as much information as possible so we can know more about where he came from and our family history.

I am usually not a “selfish” person and I am interested to read the other posts in this blog-off.  Would others benefit themselves like I have?  I would be interested to hear others opinions on this.

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This entry is Round 2 of the Blog-Off for Babies, a contest between bloggers to benefit the March of Dimes. Click on the logo at the left to see all the participants and read more about this contest.

Blog-off for Babies Round One

Please take the time to read through this post and make comments below.   Here is the topic for this week: Topic: Oprah has popularized the phrase, “Best Life” with a series of shows centered around so-called “experts” talking about how to have, “the best life”.    What is your definition of a “best life” and how do you think you are — or are not— fulfilling your conception of it? I honestly [...]

Topic: Oprah has popularized the phrase, “Best Life” with a series of shows centered around so-called “experts” talking about how to have, “the best life”. What is your definition of a “best life” and how do you think you are — or are not — fulfilling your conception of it?

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