Tuesday, June 23, 2009

My Fair Little Lady

My daughter has fair skin.

Her mama has fair skin.

Her daddy has fair skin.

Her grandparents have...

Well, you get the picture.

Because of our fair skin heritage, we wear sunscreen, a lot of sunscreen with SPF 90 or somethingorother. We buy the little pink tube made for babies because it is the most powerful, potent, potion on the shelf in a very delicate and sensitive sort of way.

We have a sunscreen routine and very methodical application. I always, always use the sunscreen stick on my daughter's face and the cream or lotion on the rest of her. It just works best.

I knew I had packed the sunscreen stick somewhere in a little sandwich bag with other lotions and such. But she was excited to get to the beach, so I substituted the stick for the cream on her face.

Bad idea.

After returning from a relatively short time at the beach, spots of sunburn started to show up around her eyes. Within hours, the pink became pinker. Fortunately, she said it didn't hurt.

Her face, that is. My heart, however, broke into a million pieces.

So there I stood at the Pharmacy counter in Target, face to face with a well-trained professional, who probably hates tourists like me who come in with their flip-flops and air-brushed t-shirts glowing like cherry tomatoes, asking him the following question:

"I can't believe I'm asking this... but what is the best thing to put on my daughter's face? We put sunscreen on her but I guess she rubbed it off around her eyes."

"Just a good moisturizer. Solarcaine is fine other places, but not on the face."

"Good. That's what I got- a moisturizer."

"And you can give her Tylenol or Motrin for the pain."

"I got that, too."

"That's good."

"No, you don't understand. I'm one of those mothers who points and whispers when I see other mothers with kids who have a sunburn."

"Well, there goes Mother-Of-The-Year. Now, they'll be whispering about you."

"Yep. It's terrible."

"It's OK. It happens."

He handed me my medicine, a nice serving of crow, and I joined Hubs and daughter at the car.

"The pharmacist said I got what we needed. Moisturizer and Motrin. I told him that I'm usually the mother that points and whispers at mothers like me and he said I just lost "Mother-Of-The-Year."

"Yep. Now you'll never get to hold the big check."

I always wanted to hold the big check.


I wonder if they give you a huge Bic pen to endorse it.

Or a huge, pink, sunscreen stick with SPF 90.

6 comments:

Roxanne said...

My children do not burn easily, but we still slather the stuff on. Except two years ago we spent WAY more time at the beach than we intended. . .and they were all sandy and gritty and playing and we had used 50 SPF already . . .and they BOTH ended up with sunburns. Thad got a ton of freckles around his right eye ONLY--and they are still there.

I won't get to hold the big check either.

Hillary @ The Other Mama said...

Hilarious. I completely agree and we do the same thing. I spray on and then stick the face. And we go 50 or go home.
Except for the first water day of the summer pre-school session when I sent O (3) with a swim shirt on thinking it would stay on whilst swimming {really just going down a slide and through sprinklers 8000 times}.
Ahem.
It did not.
And there you have it.
I will never see the big pen or check either.

kimberly t. bowling said...

Here, I'll go ahead and make you feel better about not winning Mom of Year as well....

My kids faces and shoulders were sunburned over the weekend while at a family wedding in South Carolina. I'm not sure why I assumed their sunshine was different that Alabama's?!?

And although they all tan easily, they each have small peeling spots on their nose. I am terrible, I know.

Sarah W. said...

You know, I was at a sign store recently and saw they make big checks. You could make yourself one and give it to yourself on occasion. We all need to encourage ourselves from time to time :)

Susanne said...

Well I had no idea sunscreen comes in a stick. We did used to have one called "shade", though. That would probably do you guys good.

With my teenagers I have to nag at them to put on sunscreen. It was so much easier when they were smaller.

Heidi said...

I tried to always put it on the kids. Once my son broke out from the kind I put on his face, he was two,in a stroller, I lost the big check then.

As for me, I hate the sticky stuff. I'll stay in the shade before I slather that goo on.

I know you're a #1 mom.