Jabs

Klara didn’t let me sleep all night because she was in a playful mood and wanted attention. Then this morning we went to the pediatrician to get Klara’s jabs. During which procedure I experienced such stress that I’m now all hopped up on adrenaline and am furiously cleaning the kitchen.

Klara, in the meanwhile, is happily asleep.

9 thoughts on “Jabs

      1. You push Klara in a pram rather than a stroller. By preschool, she’ll be able to convince her classmates that she’s British with all of her “foreign” words. šŸ™‚

        Like

  1. Yes, I think “jab” is British. More descriptive sounding I think than “shot” — that sounds like a gun bring fired.

    Like

  2. During which procedure I experienced such stress that I’m now all hopped up on adrenaline and am furiously cleaning the kitchen.
    That really got to you. 😦 😦 It’s hard watching babies get shots. I promise she’ll remember nothing though. I certainly don’t remember my tetanus shot from which I still have the scar tissue.

    Like

    1. She has learned to cry in this really guilt-inducing way where she turns the corners of her mouth downwards and looks so pitiful that I feel like the greatest evildoer in the world. It’s not a pleasant feeling!

      Like

    2. “I certainly don’t remember my tetanus shot from which I still have the scar tissue.”

      That’s probably from your smallpox vaccination (no longer given in the U.S. after 1972).

      That vaccination wasn’t given with a hypodermic injection, but with a bifurcated (two-pronged) needle that was dipped into the vaccine solution, and then used to prick the skin a number of times. The area would then form a small, itchy blister over about a week, and after another week the scab would fall off, leaving the scar.

      So that vaccination really was a “jab”!

      Like

      1. “That vaccination wasn’t given with a hypodermic injection, but with a bifurcated (two-pronged) needle that was dipped into the vaccine solution, and then used to prick the skin a number of times. The area would then form a small, itchy blister over about a week, and after another week the scab would fall off, leaving the scar.”

        • Jesus Christ. I have the scar, too. I guess it was administered in the USSR after 1972.

        Like

Leave a comment