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Relationships

So here's my story - read it and weep (you have been warned)

203 replies

BulletProofMum · 10/11/2011 11:15

I am married with three lovely children (6, 4, 20m). On the first day of the summer holidays I was preparing a barbecue on one side of the house whilst my husband was trying to light a bonfire on the other. He was looking after the baby or was toddling around the courtyard with her dolls pushchair. The older children wer inside watching t.v.

I heard shouting and then my eldest calling on me. I went round to find the bonfire out of control and my daughter's pushchair at the base of it. I went inside to find my husband sobbing and the skin hanging off his hands and arms. My daughter was in the bath screaming. What I thought were her clothes hanging off her was her skin. The ambulance took forever. My daughter was taken first to a hospital 25 min away and my husband to another. She was intially asessed as having 70 % burns. They battled to stabilise her, no one would answer my question ' will she be alright'? She was stablised, ventilated and transferred to a specialist burnes unit in Essex. She spent 32 days in intensive care, underwent 7 operations, survived 2 bouts of pneumonia, partial lung collapse, GI failure, metabolic instability. It was a roller coaster. The first two weeks were critical and she was extremely poorly. Numerous heart breaking conversations were had - I can't descibe the pain of those weeks. My husband was at the same hospital wit 15 % burns.

Once she turned the corner her progress has been fantastic. She has grafts to her face, hands, tummy, legs and large scars all over. Three times a day I have to cream and masage her, apply silicon gels and dressings, and then put on pressure garments (tight mask, gloves, leggings and body suit) that make her look like a super hero). She is extremely itchy and takes 5 drugs for this but still doesn't sleep well and scratches constantly. It wakes about 3/4 hr to do it properly. She develped blood clots so needs twice daily injections of a type of warfarin that I administer. My husband can't help and his hands are slow to heal (he had grafts up to hs elbows) and he has limited movement and pain in his hands.

So - my life is crap! My beautiful bay girls is scarred and uncomfortable (although copes remarkably well). I constantyl have to go through her massaing routine which she is becoming more tolerant of but is staill ahrd. The worst bi is puting on the gloves. She runs to my husband after I have doen the crap bit. We are back and forward to hospital (2 hr each way) once or twice a week. My poor boys have to play second fiddle all the time and I barely saw them throughout the summer. They are wonderfult o ehr though and super protective. Everywhere we go we are stared out and nudged (she wears a pink balaclava, the opressure garment).

However all this will improve as her scars mature (moths/years rather than weeks).

But here's the crux of it. Will I lose my marriage as well? My husband left a bottle of petrol, in a vegtable oil container, about 10 ft away from the bonfire, whilst in charge of a toddler. I don't know whether she picked it up but it was this that exploded. I have berated him 101 times about using petrol on bonfires, also on putting petrol (or any chemical) in stupid containers. He would give his life to turn the clock back and it was an accident. However it was a completely avoidable accident that I hold him 100% responsible for. He is a broken man but as time goes on I am finidng it harder to forgive rather than easier. What are my other options? A single mum working full time with three small children, one of whom needs an awful lot of care? I just don't know.

OP posts:
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DigOfTheStump · 12/11/2011 22:22

Hope you don' t mind my daughter commenting, she was so moved by your story, but was AS moved by the sadness a separation would add to the family that she wanted to write.

For what it is worth, I think you are coping very well. Anger and resentment are normal stages of grief and shock, and you must go through them to get to the other side. Hopefully this stage will pass for you soon.

I have no idea what I would do or feel in this sutuation, however, I think there were two parents there that day, one who made a silly decision with the petrol, and the other who knew a fire was being set and allowed the baby to be looked after at that side of the garden.

I am not saying that to make you feel bad, but to maybe offer a perspective which may allow a degree of understanding, which may lead to acceptance or forgiveness.

I wish you and your whole family all the best.

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Blu · 13/11/2011 16:49

Just one more thing that has been on my mind - sorry, BPM, you must be exhausted with all this response, by now!

I do agree that this went beyond 'an accident' because your DH was negligent in having the petrol there, and in addition to that, your voice wasn't heard or heeded. Your pov, your wish that he not keep petrol like that was not considered important enough that he listen to you, for whatever reason. He made you helpless by not allowing your voice to count. That is something to be addressed, whether or not the terrible accident had happened. And can only make your feelings of alone-ness worse now.

For me, and from this distance, I believe that he was reckless in having that petrol there, but stop short of judging him, because it isn't my place. How would you feel if he had been prosecuted fro negligence as a result of this?

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thunderboltsandlightning · 13/11/2011 18:08

It's very sad the number of stories on this thread where fathers have been involved in their children getting badly injured or in one case killed.

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ExitPursuedByaBear · 13/11/2011 22:52

Wow Dig - that is a really powerful statement, about two parents being responsible in different ways.

Food for thought.

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BulletProofMum · 14/11/2011 09:04

Blu - I have only just read your post and it was a point I made to him this morning: that I need to understand why he completely ignored my pov when it came to safety. What was it in him that made him feel invincible (arrongance?). He said he had got away with it before so he assumed he would again. We have had, of course, police involvement as is right as a child was seriosuly injured. Had the outcome been different then I suspect it would be a distince possibility that my husband would have been found culpable.

I also told that I felt that one day I would forgive him or at least live with what he'd done and that that was an important step for me.

My responsibility in this... I'll accept a small part but only a small part. At the end of the day it is the petrol in a plastic bottle that tipped this over into the tragic. She would never have got close enough to the fire without the petrol, however the petrol meant the fire came to her. I understand what you are saying that she shouldn't have been anywhere near a fire but log fires, bonfires, barabecues are part of many people's lives both inside and outside the home, petrol is not. People have lived for millenia with children near fire and yes fire does kill. However, having spent the last 4 months in and out of a burns unit. 95% of childrens burns are due to scalds ( baths, kettles, tea, pans). As one poster put earlier do not underestimate how serious water can be. This isn't because people don't have fire inside and outside their homes. I am am no way defending that it wasn't stupid (with hindsight) to have let him be in charge of a fire. Of course it was. I accept some responsibility but not equal responsibility as the accident wouldn't have happenend without the petrol.

I need every ounce of strength I have and I have had to find stength I never knew I had to get through this and to get my family thorough this. Having two parents eaten up by guilt and falling apart is not the way through this. Working together and staying together to support our children is.

I have become quite uncomforatble with putting such a personal story on such a public forum, I have found your input and support hugely helpful but feel that I will probably ask for this thread to be removed (but will mull on it for a while and spend a little more time reading all reponse fully). I may start another blog relating to here ongoing care and support but without the circumstances and relationship side.

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DigOfTheStump · 14/11/2011 09:09

BPM you are a very brave woman - the consequences will live with you family for such a long time, but the will to make this work is so strong that I truly beleve you will.

Good luck with it all, and best of luck to your DD and DH for their recoveries.

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LaVitaBellissima · 14/11/2011 09:15

I haven't read the whole thread yet (I will) but I had tears pouring down my cheeks reading your original OP Sad

You and your family are in my thoughts and I wish you all the best for the future. I hope you can forgive your husband

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nordiccamper · 14/11/2011 09:15

BulletProof.

My heart goes out to you. Best, best of luck and i hope you and your family find peace. I have no doubt that you have the strength for the road ahead but also dearly hope that you find happiness too.

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chinam · 14/11/2011 09:23

I don't have any advise to give you, but I do want to wish to wish you and your family well for the future. Take care

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VivaLeBeaver · 14/11/2011 09:25

I'm so sorry about what has happened and I wish your dd and dh speedy recoveries.

I can understand how you feel towards your dh and in your position I don't know if I'd be able to forgive. The only thing I can say as an outsider is that people often think that such things won't happen to them. I'm sure that if for one minute he'd have thought it could happen he wouldn't have used petrol, etc. He's probably seen it been used by others with no problem, done it himself numerous times with no problem and thought that you were worrying with no need when you told him about it.

My dh loves me and my dd very much and would never intentionally do anything that might harm us. However when we go camping he is happy to use a paraffin lamp with a real flame in the tent. Even when dd is asleep in the sleeping compartment. If the tent caught fire we'd never get her out. He is also happy to cook in the tent. I've told him I don't think it's safe and I'm not happy. He Laughs and tells me not to be so daft. He would be devastated if anything happened but he just does not see the danger.

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AngryFeet · 14/11/2011 09:51

Blimey viva has he not heard about all of the carbon monoxide cases recently? I refused to let DH cook anywhere near our tent this summer and if he insisted I would refuse to sleep in it!

OP so so sorry you are all going through this. I too would find it very hard to forgive because although it was an accident he was very very stupid about it. But if you still love him of course you should try. I'm sure I would.

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ExitPursuedByaBear · 14/11/2011 09:54

BulletProof - How are your boys?

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BulletProofMum · 14/11/2011 10:03

Wonderfully protective. It's very cute. If she gets surrounded by children (which is frequently) either staring or asking very open questions, my eldest is straight over holding her hand and cuddling her. They fight over who will sit nect to her etc.

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DigOfTheStump · 14/11/2011 10:05

BPM your family sound lovely.

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Blu · 14/11/2011 13:04

BPM - I agree with you re the fire. I don't think there is an issue with a parent being with 3 kids while they light an ordinary bonfire. There is an issue with having petrol in a plastic container right by the bonfire, and the children.

And There are people further down the thread who have missed that the fact that you were 'preparing' a barbecue is irrelevant, it wasn't lit, you weren't intending to light it at the time and you maight just as well have been raking leaves or talking to a neighbour over a hedge.

Viva - there is a thread on MN somewhere - camping topic - about a MN-er who witnessed a tent fire in one of her group of camping friends, and i think it links to a YouTube clip of a tent fire. One to share with your DH? FWIW I never allow children in our tent or between the tent and the cooking when we are cooking. (and don't cook in the tent).

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BettySwalloxs · 14/11/2011 14:01

BPM,

I am so sorry that this has happened. It must be stressful enough with caring for DD without the additional burden of how you feel towards DH.

I agree with earlier posters - there are a lot of armchair generals in this thread. It is irrelevant as to what they think or would do about forgiveness etc. Your DH has and will suffer enough for what has happened.

What I would say is that life sometimes is a roll of a dice. Bad things happen but we cannot always prevent them. Think of the times while driving that you have thought to yourself the difference that a couple of seconds would have made to something becoming a tragic outcome in all sorts of circumstances. How many head on crashes do we somehow avoid in our driving careers due to other peoples recklessness? How many close shaves do we parents have due to hot pans, open stair gates, hot drinks, a momentary lapse of concentration when the kids are swimming, or when out shopping or near a busy road? The point is, some things happen in life and we can't change them. All we can do is live in the now and do our best.

You both need to focus on succeeding as a family and making your DD recover as well as you both can manage. Anger, blame and resentment towards each other is a waste of the scarce energy resources you have as a family. Use that resource wisely and talk to each other - properly talk- away from the DC for a few hours if you can - and try and move forward with each other without life long recriminations. Your family deserves that. I would imagine that is what your DD would be most proud of as she grows up into an adult. Make her proud.

Betty. X

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nenevomito · 14/11/2011 19:16

BPM I'm glad you came back to update. I understand why you may not want this to stand in public though.

The idea of a blog is a good one. I've also been thinking about starting a support thread over in health for you and Vannah and any other parents who are having to deal with burns and their ongoing (almost endless!) care.

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beakysmum · 14/11/2011 20:14

Blimey Viva, do some men really not have a clue? I work with a girl who was camping with her boyfriend, just the two of them, and their tent caught light from a paraffin lamp inside. She has horrific burns all over her hands and forearms from where she had to break her way out through the burning fabric, which went up in flames in seconds. Please don't let it happen to your family.

BPM - my heart goes out to you. I have thought about you so much (and have wept) over the past few days. I really do wish you all the very best x

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VivaLeBeaver · 14/11/2011 21:25

Oh he doesn't come camping with us anymore and I have a nice safe LED lamp.

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noseinbook · 14/11/2011 23:37

Just to say that health and safety is not something that can be shared or delegated. Each and every one of us needs to make sure that our environment is safe. If you nearly trip over a wire at work, say, it's not good enough to report it - deal with it then and there.

Many people have learned this the hard way, we are all human and fallible, and this is not directed at you, OP. In my heart I am weeping for you.

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carantala · 15/11/2011 02:12

BPM Thinking of you and your family; best wishes for the future!

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sakura · 15/11/2011 12:32

Trust your instincts

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TravellerForEver · 15/11/2011 12:48

Bullet You know the one things that came out of your Op is how strong both of you are.
You to keep going regardless of what has happened, looking after a very sick child, doing all the treatments and still carrying on working.
Your DH to have kept a sharp mind in horrific circuinstances, risked his life and sustained terrible injuries to try and save his dd.

Then you are both hurting a hell of a lot, who wouldn't be? You to see your dd suffering in this way (I know that even for something so minor compared to your dd, it was like I could feel my dc's pain in myself. Can't explained in anymore than that) and your DH to see his dd suffering and knowing what it really means as he has sustained similar, albeit smaller, injuries.

Please don't let blame going in the way. Blame is a quick fix to relieve emotional pain and try and push it away. Except that it doesn't really do that. At best it burries the pain, which then comes out at inappropriate times. At worst, it will destroy relationships (between you and your DH, but also maybe between you and you dd, your DH and his dd, etc...)
This pain will go away, it will take time but it will go away and you will be able to do what mums do best, supporting your dd in her life, with your best abilities and despite whatever life is going to throw at her.
Carry on talking and have some counselling, you, your H and perhaps your dcs too if you find that this is getting too difficult to handle for them too.

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Altinkum · 09/02/2013 16:31

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ledkr · 09/02/2013 16:44

Altinkum- I bet that will be loads if help, nobody can fully understand how it is unless they've experienced similar.
I can't add to what has already been said other than to ask where you are? I am an ex nurse and would gladly help with the creaming etc if nearby. I'm in glos.

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