I've read some very interesting, anti-medical posts from you on this board. This one, i simply do not believe. I do not believe that any hospital would refuse a parent to stay overnight in a hospital.
Sounds like something she saw on a Soap Opera.![]()
I must have been really lucky because back in the early 1960's I had to be hospitalized and my mother was allowed to be in the room with me, with no problems or drama.

So, if you want to call me a rabid animal, go ahead. I can take whatever you dish out. But I will never ignore my inner voice that tells me when my kids are in danger or something is really wrong.
I wanted to chime in - I posted that I think of the term "mama bear" as a negative thing, and I do. However, I think most of the examples of positive "mama bear" behavior given in this thread are just good parenting. I would think less of a parent who wouldn't advocate for their child if the child truly needed help and couldn't advocate for themselves. These just aren't the type of examples that I think of when I hear the term "mama bear". So often on the Dis and elsewhere, parents micromanage every interaction their children have with the rest of the world and if anyone points out that they might have over reacted they trot out the "mama bear" excuse. They had to react like that, they had a "mama bear" moment.
I don't think that protecting your child from an actual threat or problem that they can't fix on their own is a bad thing at all, but I also don't think of it as "mama bear" behavior. . . I think of it as good parenting. It's the people who react irrationally to any tiny slight - real or imagined - and then try to justify their behavior as a "mama bear" moment who I always think of when I hear the term.
ETA - I can't believe I typed that term so many times - I always cringe when I read it and now I've typed it way too many times.
Maybe Ive never seen the type of parent that is the topic here...
Your DD is now being excluded from parties. Sorry, I have the right to judge this kind of behavior. There were 3 seperate incidents in a matter of 2 weeks with this type of behavior in DD's class. Parents need to realize no kid is perfect and usually both parties are to blame in any situation.I wanted to chime in - I posted that I think of the term "mama bear" as a negative thing, and I do. However, I think most of the examples of positive "mama bear" behavior given in this thread are just good parenting. I would think less of a parent who wouldn't advocate for their child if the child truly needed help and couldn't advocate for themselves. These just aren't the type of examples that I think of when I hear the term "mama bear". So often on the Dis and elsewhere, parents micromanage every interaction their children have with the rest of the world and if anyone points out that they might have over reacted they trot out the "mama bear" excuse. They had to react like that, they had a "mama bear" moment.
I don't think that protecting your child from an actual threat or problem that they can't fix on their own is a bad thing at all, but I also don't think of it as "mama bear" behavior. . . I think of it as good parenting. It's the people who react irrationally to any tiny slight - real or imagined - and then try to justify their behavior as a "mama bear" moment who I always think of when I hear the term.
ETA - I can't believe I typed that term so many times - I always cringe when I read it and now I've typed it way too many times.

The example I think of when I think of the phrase, used in the way I think of it, was my mom in a particular situation.
When I was 4, I brightly decided to hang from my knees from our front year geodesic dome. It was a small one, but I was wearing a dress and tights, and I slipped. Landed smack dab on top of my head.
When she took me to the doctor's and it was recommended I stay overnight at the hospital, that was fine. However, in 1973/4, the staff thought that a 4 year old would be totally fine by his/herself, and REFUSED to let my mom stay. She knew me, and knew that I would NOT be OK alone. She went mama bear to the nurses and doctor, though I think she called herself a tigress actually, and got very special permission to stay with me.
That's mama bear, where you perceive a true threat to your kiddo, and will protect them.
She'd had to do basically the same thing in '72 at a different hospital, when her OB forgot to sign off on my baby brother rooming in with her...he'd done so when I was born, but forgot when brother was born, and she ended up forcing the nurses to call the doctor at his home, get him back to the hospital, and sign off so that the nurses would get brother out of the nursery and into my mom's arms.
I've read some very interesting, anti-medical posts from you on this board. This one, i simply do not believe. I do not believe that any hospital would refuse a parent to stay overnight in a hospital.
Sounds like something she saw on a Soap Opera.![]()
Actually, that might be true. My mom got her tonsils taken out in the 60s and she had to stay overnight. Her parents were not supposed to stay with her and she had to stay by herself. She said she was very scared.
I know bumber is anti-medical but I think this type of thing where the children stay alone was common (at least in some areas).
It isn't protecting children that anyone is against, I don't think. I mean, some parents are over-protective, some are ridiculously over-protective, but big whup. There have always been over-protective parents.When I think of mama bear I think, like some pp's, of a mother who protects her child when necessary. I do have 2 kids with multiple disabilities, they do have IEP's; while not shouting in a meeting, I have refused to sign until all the facts were put into minutes, and have even brought a doctor along. And I had a meeting with the prinicpal last week b/c dd's 3rd grade teacher refused to allow her to use the bathroom during recess and the inevitable happened. I have, in fact, yelled at nurses when my child was left vomiting for three hours (every 5 minutes or less, it was a drug reaction) because there was change of shift and they forgot to call the dr. I have yelled at an ER doc who tried to do a spinal tap without sedation because they were "a little short staffed" and he didn't think I'd mind. I yelled at the same doc because my daughters bp was dropping, she was extremely dehydrated, had a 106.4 temp, and he wanted to "wait" for IV fluids because she didn't need them yet. So, if you want to call me a rabid animal, go ahead. I can take whatever you dish out. But I will never ignore my inner voice that tells me when my kids are in danger or something is really wrong.
It used to be used when parents were really defending their child in a situation they needed it. It was usually the gut reaction to someone doing major harm to their child.
Now it seems that if "little Jane" gets a C on her test because the teacher didn't explain something right "little Jane"'s mom goes all mama bear on the teacher for not explaining it perfectly
I hear a term "special snowflake" used to describe the children of parents and while it cracks me up it seems quite fitting at the same time.
) and I told her to go ahead. As long as it doesn't harm him physically I'm pretty much OK with whatever she wants to do in her classroom. She's the teacher, I'm not. DS's teacher knows she can approach me about anything, any problem and I'm more than willing to work with her in any way that I can.
I told her go right ahead..if it kept him from doing something incredibly gross I was all for it.