Ha! Is that an inspired title or what?
Published on April 2, 2007 By Texas Wahine In Blogging

I spent most of today cleaning since Spring Break is over and school starts tomorrow and I wanted our routine to get off to a good start.

I was close to having everything I wanted to do done and in time to watch The Simpsons, too.

Out of nowhere my middle child announced that he had something in his ear.

Ok. It could be wax. I've seen the insides of his ears.

"It's a little blue ball," he told me.

I asked him if HE put it in there (obviously he did because little blue balls don't just magically materialize inside ears).  He did the Bill Cosby I-don't-know routine before finally softly admitting that he did put it in theren for reasons unknown to himself.

He defended his actions by telling me that he had put a tiny ball in there on a different day and it had fallen out all by itself. Great defense.

I got out my trusty otoscope to check out the damage (I'm using that thing way too much).

Sure enough, there was a shiny blue blockage inside his ear. I considered trying to pry it out with a sterilized metal curette, but just before attempting it I realized I would probably push it in farther and make things worse.

We were all ratty from chillin' and cleanin', so I made him scrub the blue stuff (Flavor-Ice? Marker?) off his face and arms. We all put on clean clothes and I slapped on some make-up so as not to frighten anyone in the clinic.

I had the terrific foresight to DVR The Simpsons, Family Guy, and American Dad before we headed out the door.

When I signed in, the Officer at the desk tried to discourage me from having him seen by warning me that it was a 3 hour or more wait.

I explained what was wrong, and they decided one of the medics could take us into a room and possibly just quickly grab the ball and we'd be on our way.

I knew it was pretty far in, but no one ever listens to me.

Sure enough, the medic confirmed that he would need to be seen by someone with some seriously cool ear accessories and also noted that the inside of his ear was a little bloody.

Sitting in a waiting room for 3 hours with 3 children should be the punishment for stealing cars or kicking puppies.

We made the best of it, though. The boys were incredibly well-behaved, drawing and playing and talking with their sister. Izzy's bedtime rapidly approached and she was super grumpy, but we did ok.

After several hours of waiting we were taken back to a room to wait some more. The boys had fun playing doctor and pretending to shock each other. Isabella laughed the most I've ever heard her laugh.

We did palm-readings on each other and I found out that in the future I'll have two dogs and live in medium-sized metal house. And I'll be married to a handsome man. Hopefully it's Adrian.

Orian also kept farting and remarked that he had "international gas"...hahahahha. He meant intestinal, but I think international gas sounds way better.

When my little guy was finally seen, he turned out to be a bit of an enigma. They tried to flush the bead out with water, but it didn't budge. They also tried to pry it out with metal chopstick things and that didn't work (and it hurt him). They had a plastic curette but decided against using it.

They gave up and called in the doctor.

We played more games while waiting for the doctor (only way I can keep the boys from trashing the place) and the doctor happened to walk in while we were cutting up and being stupid. I'm sure she thought I was nuts.

I know the Officer we saw wanted to lecture my little guy on not putting things in his ears, daddy-style.

Maybe we should have been more somber.

The doctor looked and confirmed that whatever it is (it came from under the entertainment center, btw) is way back there.

We have a referral for Ear, Nose, and Throat tomorrow and that is sure to suck. I wonder how they're going to get that thing out.

One of the guys who saw my son said he should sleep on the afflicted ear. Give gravity a shot at it, I guess.

Tomorrow is round 2. Wish me luck.

(PS - I know I'm behind replying to my other articles, but I'll catch up, I promise!  I'm not ignoring you guys.  I check JU all the time...I just don't always have full use of my arms for typing.)


Comments (Page 1)
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on Apr 02, 2007


on Apr 02, 2007
Don't have much to add. Comes with the territory of being a parent from what I've seen. I've been to our local emergency centre a few times and it didn't matter that I was a doctor. I still had to take my turn. Sounds like you're doin' double duty there though. Hang in there Tex.
on Apr 02, 2007
I pulled the same stupid stunt when I was little, performing a "magic" trick for my younger brother. I remember going to the base hospital and that it hurt like hell to get the thing removed. But that was way back in the 60s, hopefully they have a less painful method today.
on Apr 02, 2007
My son put things up his nose. I think it's easier to get things out the nose than the ear. I hope all is well at the appointment tommorow or even better if it fell out while he was sleeping.

Sitting in a waiting room for 3 hours with 3 children should be the punishment for stealing cars or kicking puppies.


Bless your heart. This is absolutely true.

on Apr 02, 2007
When I was little I put things up my nose too. What I didn't realize was that when they disappeared they didn't become part of my brain. I mean, did I really think all that bubble gum was going to help my intelligence or something?

I hope it goes well.
on Apr 02, 2007
I AM NOT RECOMENDING THIS TREATMENT OPTION. (Don't sue me)

An un official way to get it out...IF your kid will hold VERY still, you can put an miniscule dot of superglue on the defuzzed end of a qtip. Wait a sec to let it get almost set, and make sure you don't touch the earcannal and then stick it to the item in the ear.

I've seen this done twice. 1st time it worked perfectly. 2nd time....well, either the kid wiggled or they used too much super glue an dthey superglued the end of the qtip in his ear.
on Apr 02, 2007
When kids do dumb shit I just reach back and remember ALL THE DUMB SHIT I DID.
on Apr 02, 2007
I had a cousin who was losing her hearing.  Come to find out, she was filling her ears with unpopped popcorn whenever they had popcorn.  How weird is that?
on Apr 02, 2007
Well, we're back. They got us RIGHT IN this time.

The doctor first tried using an ear suctioning device but that didn't even remotely work. Then he tried a pokey thing because he could see it was a bead with a hole in it.

Then he started using a curette, but Orian was crying and wiggling, so they decided to get a "papoose" (kinda like a kid-sized straight jacket). When they came back and set it up, Orian was clinging to me and crying and we had to physically put him on the table.

He struggled against the papoose the way Izzy fights her swaddling blanket. Heh.

The doctor used the curette to dig the bead out, and Orian screamed shrilly the entire time. He was hurting and very scared. The doctor did get it out, though.

It was a ginormous bead from Xavier's necklace (he had me cut it off of him the other day).

(Ok, Orian just came downstairs with scotch tape across his eyes, saying "I can't see very good". My house is a zoo.)

Anyways, Xavier had tears in his eyes from watching what his brother went through. His sense of empathy is wonderful. It made me proud.

Orian cried for a good 30 minutes afterward. I can guarantee he won't stick another thing in his ear. This is a lesson that will stick with him.

He has ear drops 3 times a day for 3 days, and those hurt his ear too since his inner ear is all scraped up.

So glad that's over with.

Mason: LOL at your "magic trick"... And apparently it's STILL painful!

DrDonald: Thanks. I'm relieved to hear that even doctors' kids do this!

Loca: Nose would have been much better. Probably way grosser though.

QOD: LOL. That is too funny. You should have stuck a calculator in there!

MM: Haha. Me too. I had someone say that they would have been so mad. I wasn't mad. What good would it do to be mad? I'm a grown up and I still do stupid things all the time.

LH: Your suggestion is both brilliant and terrifying! Heh. My luck, we'd have to have the q-tip and the bead removed and I'd have to explain why a q-tip was glued inside his ear.

LW: The nasal aspirator is actually a really good idea and probably would be least likely to cause further harm. Unfortunately, it was stuck waaaay in there, and even hospital-grade suction didn't work.

on Apr 02, 2007
Karma: Haha. I'll bet her parents were relieved (and a bit disturbed!).

Why do kids feel compelled to cram things into orifices? So weird. Orian still can't articulate why he felt the need to do it.
on Apr 02, 2007
had a cousin who was losing her hearing. Come to find out, she was filling her ears with unpopped popcorn whenever they had popcorn. How weird is that?


VERY weird! Did they ask her why?

She wanted an ear of corn?   
on Apr 02, 2007
LW: I wondered about that...them giving him something. Of course, the doctor kept insisting that it didn't hurt. Like hell it didn't. Bastard.

Good point about him doing it again. I at least hope he varies his routine to make it interesting (kidding!). Ha.

UDigIt: LOL. You are one quick-witted guy.
on Apr 02, 2007
Why do kids feel compelled to cram things into orifices?


Hate to tell ya, Tex but wait 'till he get's a little older and gets him a REAL case of blue balls...
on Apr 02, 2007
My ex-wife worked at a child care centre and one kid stuck a bunch of dead flies up his nose and in his ears. When asked why he said "I was being a dead zombie".

Anyway, I'm glad they finally got the bead out of Orian's ear. Hopefully, it won't happen again.

The qtip idea is fantastic but scary too.
on Apr 02, 2007
Poor kid. Sounds awful. Of course, when I clicked on this, I was expecting a very different story.
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