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9/14/07
So I guess you could say I was rather disconnected from the entire pregnancy. I was excited and eager in a basic biological way to be certain, but as far as emotional engagement, I simply couldn’t point to or identify a single solid emotion for how I felt about my son’s approaching birth. The most tangible thing I can remember feeling was the hope that he would arrive before the New Year (his due date was December 29) so that we would have the advantage of an extra child credit on our 2006 taxes. Lauren,
for her part, had her own varying emotions over the course of the pregnancy
that she’d never experienced with Allison – not the least of which was
being scared to pieces over the idea of having a son. A week before we went in for the ultrasound
that would reveal the sex of the baby, she had a dream where she gave
birth to a boy and then asked the midwife if we could exchange him for
a girl. It freaked her out and she broke down crying
several times, apologizing to the baby growing inside her belly over and
over again. But it forced her
to face a fear that had gone largely unspoken, and by the time we walked
into the hospital for our ultrasound a week later, she had not only accepted
the idea that we might have a boy, but was actually getting excited about
the prospect. As time went on, her primary worry seemed to
revolve around the timing of Jesse’s birth.
She was hoping for him to come before Christmas so that we could
all just enjoy the holidays without the imminent birth looming over everything. As the days in December passed, her concerns
became more focused on the I did my best to ease her worries on this latter issue, trying to convince her that none of that would matter if things actually turned out that way. Plans would alter, the day would re-focus and nobody would think anything of it if Jesse decided to pick that particular day to be born. It finally took Lauren’s midwife, Barbara telling her essentially the same thing before Lauren could relax and accept that possibility as a possibility. Barbara told Lauren to simply visualize the birth happening on Christmas. Visualize what would really happen. Visualize how everything would transpire, what people would do, and how it would all feel. She basically told her that unless she could make peace with the fact that this birth could happen on Christmas, then she was just setting herself up for a self-fulfilling prophesy. After that last pre-natal appointment, it took Lauren all of five minutes to think it through and realize how silly she had been. She found herself, once again, not only accepting the idea but actually getting excited about the prospect of a Christmas baby.
It has been a tradition for the past few years that our family does its Christmas on Christmas Eve. So on the evening of the 24th, we all went over to Lauren’s brother Chris’s house, just down the road, for dinner and presents. Lauren’s discomfort, which had reached an apex several weeks earlier, was now moving into a realm that made it impossible to even sit on a comfortable couch without pain. As the evening came to an end, Chris’s wife Susan suggested that Lauren go upstairs and soak in their giant whirlpool tub for awhile. After the rest of the family left, she did just that. I sat there with her as she enjoyed just floating and being able to turn her body toward the ground for the first time in months. She floated for nearly an hour before getting out and drying off. By the time we went downstairs, Susan and Chris had just finished cleaning the kitchen and livingroom. We figured we would just come down, gather our things and leave, but the four of us struck up a conversation in the kitchen. After fifteen minutes we decided to move into the livingroom so we could actually sit on couches rather than wooden chairs. Their daughter, Abigail was asleep and Lauren’s parents had taken Allison back to Lisa’s with them. The four of us sat talking for hours about nothing in particular. It’s amazing how wonderful it was to have an adult conversation without needing to stop every few minutes to change a diaper, pour some juice, break up a bickering match between Allison and her cousin Emily, or otherwise find a way to make the screaming, crying and/or whining stop. The room was dim. The Christmas tree was lit. Christmas music was playing softly on the stereo. The peace and quiet was therapeutic after nearly four days of toddler wrangling and over a month of typical Christmas season stresses. None of us really wanted the night to end, but tiredness and anticipation of the next day got the better of us, so Lauren and I packed up and headed out. Back at Lisa’s house we took our time getting ready for bed. We nuked some frozen burritos and sat up with Lauren’s dad for a few minutes. At some point we heard Allison toddling down the stairs, her breathing wet and raspy with a croup she’d developed a few days earlier. After steaming her out in the bathroom for a few minutes, I sat on the recliner in our room with her in my lap, hoping a night of upright sleeping would help her heal. She and I settled in around midnight and Lauren settled in a few minutes later. Barely any time seemed to pass before Lauren woke me up informing me that her water had just broken. I was awake immediately. It was just past two o’clock. “Well…” I said, “I guess we’re having a Christmas baby.” Lauren laughed and said, “I guess we’re having a Christmas baby!” I got her a towel to hold back the continuous gush that was now flowing from between her legs. There was some discussion as to whether we should leave for home now or wait a little while. She’d had no contractions thus far, another glaring difference from Allison’s birth where Lauren had been in good painful labor for several hours before the amniotic sac finally broke. Lauren knew from her own experience as a midwife that her labor might not even start for another several hours – quite possibly several days. Perhaps, she reasoned, we could wait until morning, do Christmas with all the cousins, eat breakfast and then make our way home after that. That idea went out the window rather quickly after I went downstairs to get Lauren’s mom, and her contractions (Lauren’s, not her mom’s) suddenly kicked in. “Okay, I’m scared now,” Lauren said. “I want to go home.” My excitement level never elevated. From the moment Lauren told me her water broke until well after Jesse was born, I stayed in practicality and logistics mode, figuring out where things where, what we needed and what had to be done. I started loading our bags into the car and making sure Lauren’s parents had all of Allison’s stuff since they would be following along a few minutes behind with her in tow. As I packed, the plot began to thicken with each trip up and down the stairs. Lauren called Barbara on my first trip and learned that she had the flu. As I headed down the stairs, Lauren was trying to call Christine, her friend from midwife school who had promised to be Lauren’s “backup” should Barbara, for whatever reason, not be available. When I came back up, Lauren told me that Christine was putting in her token monthly per diem shift at the hospital and would not be able to come. As I left to bring the next load of stuff down to the car, Christine was telling Lauren that she would call Kathy, the midwife who had caught Allison, to see if she could come. When I returned, I was told that Kathy also had the flu. In the span of three trips up and down the stairs, every one of our homebirth practitioner options had been eradicated. The question now became, “What do we do?” We really wanted a homebirth. But more than that, we really did not want to go to the hospital. Beyond all the personal reasons like avoiding unnecessary interventions, I had a much more practical reason for wanting to do the birth at home. The pregnancy rider on our health insurance only covered a couple thousand dollars, and the rest we had to pay out of pocket. We’d gotten that insurance intentionally, knowing the rider would be more than adequate to cover our homebirth expenses. But the instant we set foot inside a hospital for anything short of a life-or-death emergency, the price would escalate to something far beyond what Lauren and I could afford. Lauren had often said, only half-jokingly, that if it came down to it she could always talk me through the delivery. I, hardly joking, asked now if she was serious. Lauren didn’t know what to do. She knew Christine would be at the hospital, so at least we would have a friendly face and pair of hands to catch the baby, but she was still worried about what would happen after Jesse was born. Since the people at the hospital knew her from the numerous births she had attended, she wondered if they would yield on some of the rules for her. Would they let her keep the baby by her side at all times instead of sending him to the nursery? Would they let her leave early? Lauren called Barbara to ask what to do. And despite the fact that she had been throwing up several hours earlier, Barbara told Lauren to head home. She would come when it was time and they would just hope for the best. “I haven’t thrown up for a few hours,” Barbara said, “so I might be okay.” With that settled, we turned our attention briefly to who would actually be there. At Allison’s birth we’d had two official midwives (Kathy and Christine) as well as another of Lauren’s midwife friends who had merely come along for moral support and an extra set of hands. We also had Lisa, Susan, Lisa’s daughter Emily, and Lauren’s parents. We’d envisioned Jesse’s birth as an equally large family affair. In addition to Barbara and her intern/assistant Melecia, we’d intended to have Lisa, Susan and Lauren’s parents once again. Even before tonight’s set of circumstances, Christine had said that she would come if she could. There would also be Abbie, the receptionist at the birth center where Lauren and Barbara midwife’d, as well as Ellie, Lauren’s teenage cousin. Well now it was Christmas morning. Melicia, Abbie and Ellie were all out of town. Lisa said she couldn’t put off Christmas morning for her girls, but swore she would come up as soon as they had finished opening presents. We knew Susan and Chris had a full Christmas day planned too, so we only texted them on our way out of New Jersey to let them know what was going on. It looked like this birth was going to consist of only us, Barbara, Lauren’s parents, and Allison. We’d
had a lot of discussions about whether or not to have Allison present
during the birth. I could obviously
understand how traumatic such a thing might be for a young child to see
their mother in such excruciating pain, but Lauren had seen other children
at other homebirths handle it just fine.
In addition to preparing Allison for the fact that she was about
to become a big sister, we’d also spent a lot of time over the last several
months preparing her for what it would be like during the actual birth
– how, even though Jesse was in Mommy’s belly, he was going to come out
of Mommy’s “tushie.” “Mommy is
going to scream a lot,” we’d tell her, “but she’ll be okay.
When she screams Lauren kept urging me to drive faster. The contractions were already getting closer and more intense. It was almost three in the morning, Christmas morning no less, and hardly anyone was on the road. Speeding now, I told her, would almost guarantee that I got pulled over. She suggested that maybe they would sympathize with our situation and give us a police escort. I thought that unlikely. Best-case scenario, I said, they would escort us to the nearest hospital, right where we didn’t want to be. Without any traffic, we still made it home in record time adhering to the speed limit. On the drive Lauren called up Marilyn, a woman she had hired to be our birth photographer, to let her know it was time. I had resisted the idea of paying a photographer from the moment Lauren mentioned it, figuring we’d have plenty of people on hand who could wield a camera. But as we approached home with the prospect of a very empty house, I welcomed the concept since Marilyn was also a licensed doula who could potentially assist Barbara if need be. Marilyn was waiting in the driveway when we pulled up. I gratefully noted that of the three other people who lived in our renovated hay barn / apartment complex, only one car was actually in the driveway – our upstairs neighbor, Isabelle’s. We had developed a good rapport with Isabelle and told her all about the upcoming homebirth. We trusted that she would put two and two together and not call the police when Lauren’s transitional banshee screaming ultimately started.
Over the next hour Lauren’s behavior could seriously have been the inspiration for a sitcom. A contraction would hit and, rather than screaming, she would get pissed off, shouting, “Shit, this fucking sucks man, motherfucker!” (Okay, so this particular sitcom might not necessarily air during family hour, but still.) The contraction would pass and she would relax for a bit, smacking her lips and apologizing while holding me close. Then the next one would hit, she’d shove me away, arch her back, make a few high-pitched bird noises and shout, “No! No! NO! Oh god this is so fucking stupid! I feel like I’m going to die!” Then, “I mean I know I’m not actually going to die, but fuck, I just want to say it so everybody just shut up about it!” Nobody had said a word. While she laughed and apologized between contractions, sounding more drunk than laborious, I asked her, “Are you aware of how funny you’re being?” After the next contraction I voiced my observation that her labor noises were virtually indistinguishable from her sex noises. Under other circumstances I’m pretty sure that would have elicited more of a laugh. At 7:20 when Barbara told her that she was fully dilated and should start pushing, Lauren got indignant. “No, I’m not, no! Are you kidding? Are you fucking kidding me? No, I’m not pushing okay?” After
a few minutes convincing, Lauren let out a big huff and leaned up on her
elbows with a look that said, “Okay fine, I’m doing it so leave me alone
already.” With the next contraction,
she pushed. And then she screamed.
Loud. No I mean loud. So loud I was worried I’ve heard Barbara state on more than one occasion that women tend to labor the same way they live their lives. Diligent, get-down-to-business types do just that while giving birth and generally have shorter complication-free labors. Wishy-washy people have drawn out labors that ebb and flow needlessly as their body and mind can’t decide what to do. By day, Lauren is a procrastinator who will bitch, moan and complain about how she doesn’t want to do something, yet when the time comes, she will buckle down and get the job done. This labor followed that mentality almost to the letter. She fought and resisted whenever anybody suggested anything that she didn’t want to do, but in the end always did what was needed of her.
On the next contraction Lauren pooped, as will happen when a birthing mom pushes. Barbara, an old pro, scooped it up with a tissue and tossed it into the trash next to her without a second thought. When this happened, I saw Allison sit up straight in her grandmother’s arms. Lauren pooped some more and once again Barbara scooped it up and threw it away. Allison turned to Lauren’s mom and, just this side of crying, said, “Barbara is throwing Jesse in the trashcan.” My heart broke wide open and all I wanted to do was cry. “Baby Jesse” was still an intangible concept to her. All Allison knew was that “baby Jesse” was going to come out Mommy’s of “tushie” (our word for the female genitalia). Of course it’s impossible to expect a two-year-old to differentiate between a “tushie” hole and a butt hole, much less understand how a fully formed human could be squeezed from either one. And in that haze of not-quite-understanding, she watched as the midwife took her baby brother and threw him, bit by bit, into the trash. More than ever, I just wanted to hold her. Instead I said, “No honey, that’s not Jesse. Jesse’s coming soon, but he’s still inside Mommy’s belly.” Lauren let loose her loudest scream yet directly into my ear making it pop. Allison’s eyes likewise popped wide open in a look that could only be translated as, “Oh my God, what’s wrong?”
I looked down at my son and tried to feel some kind of emotion, but nothing came. I remembered feeling a similar absence with Allison in those first few moments, but I’d attributed it largely to the shell shock of Lauren’s long and drawn out labor. By contrast, this whole process had finished right when I had assumed it would just finally be kicking into gear. I was completely lucid as I looked down at Jesse, and still I felt nothing. Even with Allison I can remember being struck by, and kept commenting on, how confused she seemed to be as she looked around. With Jesse I didn’t even have that. In fact, rather than focusing on my new baby boy, all I could keep thinking about was Allison. She was still with Lauren’s mom, hanging back by the foot of the bed. I said, “Do you want to see baby Jesse, Allison?”
She climbed up into bed between me and Lauren and immediately started petting Jesse on top of his head and cooing, “We love you baby Jesse.” She leaned down to give him a kiss, unfazed by the slimy white vernix currently drying all over his body. There was no indication so far that the birth had freaked her out, or that she had transferred her fear for Lauren’s pain into resentment for Jesse. I felt my love for this little girl balloon to five times what it was in that moment. We sat there, the three of us, just looking at our new family member when Allison, completely conversationally, asked, “Where the pacenta?”
“Yeah,” she said quietly. “Dancing” had always been a special Daddy-Daughter thing for Allison and me. Starting from when she was just an infant I would hold her to my chest, one arm under her butt and the other gently cradling her head, as I bounced back and forth across the floor to music that I either sang or played off the computer. Hernia surgery, as well as the mere fact that Allison was getting older and heavier, had all but put an end to our dancing days earlier in the year. But as the craziness of the last few hours began to clear, I felt like she needed a daddy dance again. I knew I did. I carried her downstairs, away from everybody. I didn’t have the energy to actually sing so I turned on an old bedtime mix and we bounced around the room just like when she was little(er). Even though my arms ached and my incision point started to throb, I danced with her for a good half hour, not wanting to put her down. She never fell asleep, just laid there quietly, head resting on my shoulder.
A few hours later, while Jesse and Lauren continued to sleep, I was laying on the livingroom couch watching a movie with Allison when I just started to cry. They weren’t tears of joy for Jesse’s arrival. They weren’t tears of sympathy for all the pain Lauren had gone through. They were, quite simply, tears of regret for Allison, and as I lay there holding her five words kept running through my head: everything is about to change. For the last two and a half years it had just been us and Allison. She was the light of our life and we had been able to shower her with one hundred percent of our love, affection and, above all, attention. We took her to the park. We walked to the river and threw rocks in the water. We played in the backyard. We threw pillows at each other and roughhoused on the bed. We danced. We sang. We read books. It was just us and her. Beyond that, it was just me and her. And now that Jesse was here, all of that, everything, was about to change.
Would she understand? Would she realize that we still loved her even though we couldn’t spend as much time doting on her? Even if she did understand, would she go through withdrawal, depression and resentment toward any of it? Would it be worse for her than for Jesse or her future siblings, being the only one who had ever known what our undivided attention had once felt like? None of these thoughts ran through my head specifically at that moment. It was more of an all-encompassing feeling of dread punctuated by that dismal mantra: everything is about to change. I hugged Allison and told her I loved her over and over again. She was facing away from me, watching the last few minutes of Annie, and never realized I was crying.
I do love my son even though it was hard at first. Adding to the fact that I began his life with emotions that ran more negative than positive, he was also a much fussier and colicky baby than Allison ever was. It’s hard to foster already non-existent feelings of love for a child who is screaming all the time and keeping you from attending to the child you really want to be with. It is getting better though. As cliché as it sounds, I find myself loving him a little bit more every day. But almost nine months now after the day he was born, I still struggle with the fact that, even though I know I’m supposed to love my children equally, I most certainly have a favorite. It makes me wonder when, or if, that will ever change… just as I wonder when, or if, I will ever show this story to Jesse or any of his current or future siblings.
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| © 2003 BRIAN HODGES | |||||||
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