Playtime just won’t be the same for some
Greg Risling
COSTA MESA -- Debra Wilder has some apprehension about going on a
playground where she saw her students lying injured and dead in May.
Since Thursday’s approval by a state licensing board to allow children
to run free on the new playground at the Southcoast Early Childhood
Learning Center, Wilder has spent only 15 minutes in the play area.
Standing at the right angle, she has horrendous flashbacks: pulling a
swing set off of one student while she stabilized the body of another,
remembering the exact positioning of every child’s body.
She sees the faces of two children -- 3-year-old Brandon Wiener and
4-year-old Sierra Soto -- and blames herself for not helping them. She
remembers staring into the eyes of the man who caused all the madness and
asking him for help. He sternly replied “No” and closed his eyes, Wilder
said.
“I remember a lot from that day,” she said. “I feel that I failed to
protect those children. I know there wasn’t anything I could do but I
carry that feeling with me every day.”
There were mixed emotions when the children were allowed to return to
the playground where tragedy struck several months ago. When 39-year-old
Steven Allen Abrams of Santa Ana barreled his Cadillac -- allegedly on
purpose -- onto the playground, he irrevocably changed the lives of
everyone involved.
Day-care center director Sheryl Hawkinson is happy to see the kids
back in their environment but has taken the week off from work. In some
strange way, having the children playing at the very site where the
tragedy took place is almost like forgetting what happened there.
“I know the children are having fun, but it’s hard to go out there,”
she said. “My heart has been damaged forever but this is another step to
some kind of normalcy.”
The playground was silenced for the summer, devoid of the playful
clamor while construction crews built a new wall and replaced damaged
equipment. The last sounds heard on the playground were of agony and
pain.
On Tuesday, four days after the gate was open to the playground, the
tone reverted back to the usual noise: a plastic ball bouncing against a
wall, two friends fighting for a space on the slide, girls giggling in
unison.
The kids still ask questions.
“Why was the sandbox moved?” they wonder.
“Why are there bars on the wall?” they question.
“The children are so awesome, they take things so literally,”
Hawkinson said. “This place was built with love. It’s very special to
us.”
For Hawkinson and her staff, the trauma hasn’t subsided. Many of the
teachers have undergone counseling, including Wilder, who taught there
two years. She doesn’t know when she can join the kids on the playground.
But the smiles and laughs that have replaced the tears and cries have
been comforting.
“When I’m ready I will definitely go out there,” she said. “We’re
definitely happy the kids are back on the playground.”
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