There but for the grace of God, IMHO. There's no indication to me that this women wasn't a good mother. I think when a child dies by accident, we want to blame the caretaker on some level because this makes us feel safer - like it could never happen to us because we would have done things differently. It's a psychological defense mechanism and not necessarily rooted in the "facts" of any particular incident.
However, I think it is cruel to say that out loud to a person in crisis, which is what happened with the whole Twitter thing.
My continued prayers for this mother and her family and I hope she is not reading any of the junk people are posting about her. I have often thought to myself that if some terrible accident happened to my child and made the news, I would never in a million years follow it on the internet because I know a bunch of strangers with limited information would blame me for it. No one needs to read that when they are already in a painfully vulnerable state.
Respectfully. I don't know how to double quote so I will reply to both of your posts here. What it sounded like I said and what I was trying to convey were apparently two different things. It's not as if I said she held the kids head underwater while she was tweeting.
Facts? I don't think any of us has them all. Was she online 50 minutes of every hour all day? We don't know how soon after this accident occured she tweeted. I don't think I could do that, because I wouldn't want my family and closest friends finding out such information online. I think they'd feel very betrayed I chose to share that with strangers before notifying my family. We only know what we've read. I don't condemn her for requesting prayers. I question the timing she requested them if the media accounts are accurate.
I guess, I am also a little stunned that we can *bash* mothers who make crappy choices for boyfriends when their children are abused or sadly murdered, but when a mother is possibly neglectful by spending too much time online which MAY HAVE contributed to her childs tragic accidental death there are two different sets of standards.