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There are bad days and terrible days; 2 year old dead after being left in a car

Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:37 pm
Posted by SlowFlowPro
Simple Solutions to Complex Probs
Member since Jan 2004
423378 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:37 pm
Damn

quote:

According to Sheriff Randy Tucker, the mother of the child said she was on the way home from work and stopped at the daycare to pick up her child.

"They told the mother you didn't drop her off this morning and the mother immediately became distraught, ran out to the car and realized the two year old was still in the car," said Tucker.


i'm going through a rough patch right now but damn. i don't know how people go on after this.
Posted by SmoothOperator96
TD Premium Member
Member since Jan 2016
4044 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:38 pm to
How can you be that oblivious.
She didn't hear the baby while driving? She didn't see him/her when she was getting in/out the vehicle. Does she not use a rear view mirror? Come on... So sad. A life that ended waaaaaaaaaay too soon
This post was edited on 5/12/16 at 7:40 pm
Posted by SG_Geaux
Beautiful St George
Member since Aug 2004
78061 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:39 pm to
I just can't wrap my head around how you forget your kid in the car.
Posted by TheAlmightySmash
New Orleans
Member since Jun 2014
5480 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:39 pm to
She will pay dearly for her mistake.
Posted by mpar98
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2006
8034 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:40 pm to
So wait you didn't know there are complete pieces of shite in this world ?
Posted by CelticDog
Member since Apr 2015
42867 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:40 pm to
quote:

i'm going through a rough patch right now but damn. i don't know how people go on after this.


she will get weekly counseling in prison.

of course she will be on suicide watch for a while.

Posted by Mizzoufan26
Vacaville CA
Member since Sep 2012
17244 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:41 pm to
Absolutely fricking terrible

Poor Poor Angel
Posted by Btrtigerfan
Disgruntled employee
Member since Dec 2007
21564 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:42 pm to
I bet she would have never forgot her cell phone in the car.
Posted by athenslife101
Member since Feb 2013
18604 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:43 pm to
An accident is an accident. If it truly was an accident, there's no need to prosecute.
Posted by Hugo Stiglitz
Member since Oct 2010
72937 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:47 pm to
Mistakes were made.
Posted by nc14
La Jolla
Member since Jan 2012
28193 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 7:51 pm to
Ah, not enough Louisiana backwoods news for you to post. PM in 3, 2, 1
Posted by Isabelle81
NEW ORLEANS, LA
Member since Sep 2015
2718 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:04 pm to
That is just beyond stupid. How is this possible???
Posted by WW
Member since Dec 2013
2293 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:06 pm to
quote:

Have you ever forgotten your phone?

When did you realize you’d forgotten it? I’m guessing you didn’t just smack your forehead and exclaim ‘damn’ apropos of nothing. The realization probably didn’t dawn on you spontaneously. More likely, you reached for your phone, pawing open your pocket or handbag, and were momentarily confused by it not being there. Then you did a mental recap of the morning’s events.

shite.

In my case, my phone’s alarm woke me up as normal but I realized the battery was lower than I expected. It was a new phone and it had this annoying habit of leaving applications running that drain the battery overnight. So, I put it on to charge while I showered instead of into my bag like normal. It was a momentary slip from the routine but that was all it took. Once in the shower, my brain got back into ‘the routine’ it follows every morning and that was it.

Forgotten.

This wasn’t just me being clumsy, as I later researched; this is a recognized brain function. Your brain doesn’t work just on one level, it works on many. Like, when you’re walking somewhere, you think about your destination and avoiding hazards, but you don’t need to think about keeping your legs moving properly. If you did, the entire world would turn into one massive hilarious QWOP cosplay. I wasn’t thinking about regulating my breathing, I was thinking whether I should grab a coffee on the drive to work (I did). I wasn’t thinking about moving my breakfast through my intestines, I was wondering whether I’d finish on time to pick up my daughter Emily from the nursery after work or get stuck with another late fee. This is the thing; there’s a level of your brain that just deals with routine, so that the rest of the brain can think about other things.

Think about it. Think about your last commute. What do you actually remember? Probably little, if anything. Most common journeys blur into one, and recalling any one in particular is scientifically proven to be difficult. Do something often enough and it becomes routine. Keep doing it and it stops being processed by the thinking bit of the brain and gets relegated to a part of the brain dedicated to dealing with routine. Your brain keeps doing it, without you thinking about it. Soon, you think about your route to work as much as you do keeping your legs moving when you walk.

Most people call it autopilot. But there’s danger there. If you have a break in your routine, your ability to remember and account for the break is only as good as your ability to stop your brain going into routine mode. My ability to remember my phone being on the counter is only as reliable as my ability to stop my brain entering ‘morning routine mode’ which would dictate that my phone is actually in my bag. But I didn’t stop my brain entering routine mode. I got in the shower as normal. Routine started. Exception forgotten.

Autopilot engaged.

My brain was back in the routine. I showered, I shaved, the radio forecasted amazing weather, I gave Emily her breakfast and loaded her into the car (she was so adorable that morning, she complained about the ‘bad sun’ in the morning blinding her, saying it stopped her having a little sleep on the way to nursery) and left. That was the routine. It didn’t matter that my phone was on the counter, charging silently. My brain was in the routine and in the routine my phone was in my bag. This is why I forgot my phone. Not clumsiness. Not negligence. Nothing more my brain entering routine mode and over-writing the exception.

Autopilot engaged.

I left for work. It’s a swelteringly hot day already. The bad sun had been burning since before my traitorously absent phone woke me. The steering wheel was burning hot to the touch when I sat down. I think I heard Emily shift over behind my driver’s seat to get out of the glare. But I got to work. Submitted the report. Attended the morning meeting. It’s not until I took a quick coffee break and reached for my phone that the illusion shattered. I did a mental restep. I remembered the dying battery. I remembered putting it on to charge. I remembered leaving it there.

My phone was on the counter.

Autopilot disengaged.

Again, there lies the danger. Until you have that moment, the moment you reach for your phone and shatter the illusion, that part of the brain is still in routine mode. It has no reason to question the facts of the routine; that’s why it’s a routine. The act of repetition. It’s not as if anyone could say ‘why didn’t you remember your phone? Didn’t it occur to you? How could you forget? You must be negligent’; this is to miss the point. My brain was telling me the routine was completed as normal, despite the fact that it wasn’t. It wasn’t that I forgot my phone. According to my brain, according to the routine, my phone was in my bag. Why would I think to question it? Why would I check? Why would I suddenly remember, out of nowhere, that my phone was on the counter?

My brain was wired into the routine and the routine was that my phone was in my bag.

The day continued to bake. The morning haze gave way to the relentless fever heat of the afternoon. Tarmac bubbled. The direct beams of heat threatened to crack the pavement. People swapped coffees for iced smoothies. Jackets discarded, sleeves rolled up, ties loosened, brows mopped. The parks slowly filled with sunbathers and BBQ’s. Window frames threatened to warp. The thermometer continued to swell. Thank frick the offices were air-conditioned.

But, as ever, the furnace of the day gave way to a cooler evening. Another day, another dollar. Still cursing myself for forgetting my phone, I drove home. The day's heat had baked the inside of the car, releasing a horrible smell from somewhere. When I arrived on the driveway, the stones crunching comfortingly under my tires, my wife greeted me at the door.

“Where’s Emily?”

frick.

As if the phone wasn’t bad enough. After everything I’d left Emily at the fricking nursery after all. I immediately sped back to the nursery. I got to the door and started practicing my excuses, wondering vainly if I could charm my way out of a late fee. I saw a piece of paper stuck to the door.

“Due to vandalism overnight, please use side door. Today only.”

Overnight? What? The door was fine this morni-

I froze. My knees shook.

Vandals. A change in the routine.

My phone was on the counter.

I hadn’t been here this morning.

My phone was on the counter.

I’d driven past because I was drinking my coffee. I’d not dropped off Emily.

My phone was on the counter.

She’d moved her seat. I hadn’t seen her in the mirror.

My phone was on the counter.

She’d fallen asleep out of the bad sun. She didn’t speak when I drove past her nursery.

My phone was on the counter.

She’d changed the routine.

My phone was on the counter.

She’d changed the routine and I’d forgotten to drop her off.

My phone was on the counter.

Nine hours. That car. That baking sun. No air. No water. No power. No help. That heat. A steering wheel too hot to touch.

That smell.

I walked to the car door. Numb. Shock.

I opened the door.

My phone was on the counter and my daughter was dead.

Autopilot disengaged.

Posted by CaptainsWafer
TD Platinum Member
Member since Feb 2006
58385 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:16 pm to
Never paid much attention to these threads before. Have a three month old now and this scares the bejesus out of me.
This post was edited on 5/12/16 at 8:16 pm
Posted by GRTiger
On a roof eating alligator pie
Member since Dec 2008
63198 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:19 pm to
My wife had to bring our two year old to school and the baby was going in later because he had a doctor's visit. She brought them both, brought both inside, dropped our oldest off, put the little one back in the car, and drove home.

She didn't leave our little one in the car (she remembered before she even pulled into the driceway), but she freaked out because she had forgotten for a second he was there and came home instead of the doctor because of the routine.

That's probably as close as either of us will ever come, and I can't imagine forgetting for an extended period of time, but the mind is powerful.
Posted by BOSCEAUX
Where the Down Boys go.
Member since Mar 2008
47763 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:19 pm to
This exactly like that r/No Sleep story called Autopilot.
Posted by colorchangintiger
Dan Carlin
Member since Nov 2005
30979 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:21 pm to
Come on man. 2 threads about dead 2 year olds in the same day? My girl is turning 2 in 2 months. I kept looking at her and hugging her tight the day I heard about the little girl in Beauregard Parish. I couldn't imagine. I'd literally go insane, probably kill myself.
Posted by BullredsRus
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2007
754 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:31 pm to
When my son was very young, less than 6 months old I was driving him home from daycare. I got an important call and had 100% of my focus on that. I pulled up to the house, got out of the car and walked inside still on that phone call. Conversation ended within a minute or two of me walking in. It was very Erie bc I knew something wasn't right. Then it hit me and I ran out as fast as I could. I'm talking maybe three minutes total but my heart was racing. Child was fast asleep and totally fine but I still think about that every time I read one of these stories. I always think what would have happened if that turned out to be a lot longer conversation. I'd like to think that it eventually would have kicked in but I can't say for sure. That's the one and only time I ever did anything like that and I was not used to having a baby and we were still in the phase where he slept every time we took a car ride so it was almost like not having a kid in the car. Not making excuses and I'm glad nothing worse happened than me getting scared shitless, but sometimes mistakes are made. Nobody knows what was going on in her world that day except her and she'll have to live with it forever. Sad all around.
Posted by anc
Member since Nov 2012
18140 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:40 pm to
This happened a mile from my house community is pretty shaken up

The p family had a 5 year old in kindergarten as well This truly looks like a tragic accident
This post was edited on 5/12/16 at 8:42 pm
Posted by carguymatt
Member since Jun 2015
541 posts
Posted on 5/12/16 at 8:57 pm to
There's a judge in Hot Springs Arkansas accused of the same thing. This is part of what he told police;

"According to the affidavit, Naramore told police on July 24, 2015, he and his 18-month-old son Thomas were in the car and said their morning prayers. Naramore stopped at McDonald's for breakfast, which was out of the ordinary because he usually ate breakfast at home. He said he also had a court case he was worried about. He then proceeded to work."
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