Flashback


Marcel started sleeping through the night at 3 weeks. Even as a new parent, I was shocked by that.

I distinctly remember waking up, seeing the sun high in the sky, feeling rested and wonderful and wondering, “why does this seemed so strange?” Then I remembered why. Every night for the past three weeks, my newborn baby girl had routinely waken me up several times a night and often late enough for me to see the sun rise. Last night, however, she did not wake.

Of course, the next immediate thought was…SIDS!

I jumped out of bed, but kept quiet so as not to unnecessarily wake up my still sleeping wife. “Sweet Jesus,” I prayed it was not necessary. I jumped out of the bed and ran for the co-sleeper but, just before I got there, I hesitated. For the briefest of seconds I considered stealing myself before looking. I plunged ahead, anyway.

Perhaps because I was so worried, or maybe just because the blood had rushed out of my head as I had raised up, but I couldn’t immediately discern Marcel’s state. She just laid there, still as a statute of an angel. The sight made me catch my breath, but I leaned in further and, as if on cue, she sighed.

And so did I.

Maybe it was because of the fright, but probably because of the previous weeks’ sleep deprivation, I so very much appreciated Marcel’s new found trick.

Maybe it was because I grew to depend on it, or maybe because no one should be so lucky, but Tristan did not start sleeping through the night at three weeks. My newest, newborn baby girl waited until this week, our seventh week of living in her world.

And that’s damn good, too.

I’m writing this blog to catalogue the history of my life in my daughters’ world so I don’t lose and forget any of our wonderful memories. I started the blog two years after Marcel was born, though, so there are quite a few memories that I haven’t posted. From time to time, I will go back, reminisce and then write about those missed memories, however late. This is one of those times.

***

It was around midnight when Marcel decided to come into this world.

My wife and I were laying in our bed. All of the lights were bright. I remember her reading but I don’t remember what I was doing. Perhaps I was reading, as well. Perhaps I was watching TV. It was a school night.

The contractions, at this point, were mild. They were so mild that we questioned whether my wife was actually going into labor. It just so happened that my wife had an already scheduled, 2 pm appointment with her obstetrician the next day. We decided to go to sleep while we could and, if Marcel would allow, ask our questions then.

Well, I decided to go to sleep. My wife, instead, decided to do…stuff. She cleaned. She packed, I think. She might have done some paperwork. Trying to sleep as much as my conscience would allow, I wasn’t too clear on all that was happening. In the morning, I woke up for good and called into my office to explain our uncertain circumstances and to spend the day with my wife. That’s all I remember of the morning.

At the doctor’s office, there was a lot of activity. A lot of people must have been going into labor, that day, because our doctors had gotten the word to direct women away from their affiliated hospital to another hospital because the affiliated hospital was full. We stayed cool, though.

Once we got into see Sharon, our obstetrician, she confirmed that Syd was in labor and that the baby could come that day…or next week. My wife was experiencing contractions, but they were mild and she had only dilated a portion of a centimeter when she really needed to be at 10 centimeters in order to give birth. Frankly, that was disappointing news. We wanted to have a baby.

We didn’t have to complain about it, though. Sharon immediately offered to “strip the membrane” to speed the process. Eager to see this child, we took her up on the offer.

I’m still not sure what happens when you strip a membrane. A doctor friend, Mieke, said it was like taking the pin out of a grenade. Perhaps. The actual stripping, though, seems to hurt like hell. After that pain, because timing would still be uncertain, our obstetrician sent us home with instructions to call back if the contractions started coming in five minute intervals.

Despite all of my wife’s activity through the course of the night before, there were still things that needed to be done. Specifically, we had to get the car seat put into the car. A local children’s hospital provides that service for free , including a tutorial so that it’s done right in the future. We also had to get a visitor parking permit for my parents, which were available at the neighborhood police station. We left the doctor’s office with the intention of doing those things, immediately. Instead, the grenade went off.

I don’t remember the sound my wife made. Maybe she screamed, but I don’t think so. Maybe she yelled, which is like a scream, but coherent. Or maybe she just spoke firmly. I remember having control of the vehicle. I wasn’t nervous while driving so I don’t think she did anything that was distracting. I do remember her wanting me to watch out for bumps. The jostling of the car was too much to endure during one of those full on contractions. That’s saying something because, frankly, our very solid car doesn’t jostle.

Still, at one point, my wife insisted that we pull over. I’ll never forget the spot. It was a generic gas station. The attendant worked out of small, white building, where customers exchanged currency for gas, chips, cigarettes and other gas station-type staples through a bullet proof glass. To this day, I point it out every time that I pass it. The contraction subsided and we continued on our way.

By the time we got to the children’s hospital, which is somewhere between the 25 minute trip from our obstetrician and our home, the pain had subsided to the point where my wife thought we could get the car seat installed. We could. A contraction still came but, apparently, it was easier to deal with standing up.

We still needed to get the parking permit for my parents but I was wary of subjecting my wife to anymore “jostling”, as was she, so I dropped her off at home. In the brief time I was away, however, the contractions kept coming. Faster.

By the time I returned home, my wife was in real pain. Often. We decided to time the intervals. Sure enough, the contractions were coming between five and six minutes, apart. We were faced with a dilemma.

On the one hand, Sharon said to call if the contractions were five minutes apart. On the other hand, she expected that to happen two or five days later, not two or five hours later. We didn’t want to be pain-in-the-ass, nervous-first-time parents.

But we were.

So we called.

By this point, another obstetrician, Maro, was on call. I explained the situation. Or maybe my wife explained the situation. This part is hazy. I distinctly remember that we brought up going to the alternative hospital because the affiliated hospital was full. I remember that because I remember her being annoyed that we called the affiliated hospital before calling her. That wasn’t true, though. We had heard about the crush at the obstetrician’s office, not via our own phone call, and told her so, which satisfied her. She said the crush was over and sent us to the affiliated hospital.

The crush wasn’t over.

When we got there, there wasn’t a room yet available. Without a room, my wife couldn’t get an IV. We understood, as I remember it, that my wife would have to get fully hydrated with an IV before she could get an epidural anesthetic. Because a room wasn’t available when we arrived, we had a wait of undetermined length ahead of us. A potentially very long wait. A wait…filled with pain.

Now, I love my wife. I love her, in part, because of the children she has given me. Because of them, my love for her knows no bounds. I wish I could’ve had her with me in that waiting room. I could have use her strength. But I didn’t have her because my wife changed into someone else while she paced through her pain and that woman hurt my feelings so bad, that I could’ve crawled into a hole and died. Three times.

Eventually, though, we got that room and the IV and, as I remember it, the epidural not too long afterward (Thank god!). And my wife, in her bed, and me, in my easy chair, finally got to get a little of the sleep that we didn’t get the night before. This was a little after 8 pm.

From time to time, I would wake to nurses or Maro coming in to check on my wife. She was making, they noted, slow but steady progress toward that 10 centimeters dilation. There was some talk about inducing if 10 centimeters hadn’t been met by morning. A burst must have happened, though, because by 11:30, or so, they moved into action.

As my wife lay, the nurse began converting my wife’s bed, Transformer-like, into a gynecological table. The nurse (a wonderful woman whose name, I’m ashamed to say, escapes me) asked me to help her out and grab one of my wife’s legs. I had assumed that she had wanted me to hold the leg up until she could set up the stirrup. Instead, I was to be the stirrup.

I had fantasized about sitting in the waiting room, as expectant fathers had done so for generations before me. I would sit with my father and get one last lesson about the demands of the position. Or, maybe, we would just sit silently and let the torch pass. And, when the doctor burst forth from the delivery room with the good news, we would hug and I would present the cigars, and father would welcome son into that glorious fraternity.

My father had done his part. I had had the opportunity to call my parents on the way to the hospital and, with my youngest sister’s son, they had made the 3 hour plus trip from their home to be present at Marcel’s birth. But the women in that hospital had conspired against me. They had kept me in that delivery room. And I am grateful.

For several hours, my wife pushed and pushed. And every time my wife pushed, my daughter’s full head of hair came closer and closer into this world. A little closer she came with each push. A little retreat she made with each relax.

The monitor had showed some distress. Perhaps, Maro had wondered under her breath, the umbilical cord was wrapped around Marcel’s neck. Perhaps, Maro had wondered under her breath, we might need a Cesarean section. But none of that wasn’t going to be. Shortly after 1:30 am–quickly, in fact–Marcel emerged, sunny-side up. The distress, apparently, was because her nose was getting smooshed.

And this is the story of how, more than 23 hours after the first rumblings of my wife’s belly, my Marcel came into this world.

I’m writing this blog to catalogue the history of my life in my daughter’s world so I don’t lose and forget any of our wonderful memories. I started the blog two years after she was born, though, so there are quite a few memories that I haven’t posted. From time to time, I will go back, reminisce and then write about those missed memories, however late. This is one of those times.

***

At the end of the day, Marcel likes to take a pre-dinner stroll. It’s just around the block, but it’s enough to say “hi” to neighbors, marvel at cats and dogs and pick flowers and berries.

Some things, though, freak her out. People, especially little kids, that approach her too fast tend to freak her out. Barking dogs, for another example, also freak her out. So, it isn’t a given that everything we encounter on our strolls will be met with aplomb. With this in mind, I was a bit concerned about Marcel’s reaction one day when we turned the corner to find a gang of teen-aged boys just hanging out on a stoop.

Marcel didn’t immediately see them but, when she did, she stiffened up a bit. I feared that she would fear the boys and run to me to pick her up and carry her past them. Wanting her to continue to enjoy her stroll–and not particularly wanting to have to pick her up given how tired I was that evening–I sought to ease Marcel’s concern by warmly acknowledging the boys.

“What’s up, fellas?”, I saluted, to which the kids responded with warm and respectful “What’s up’s” and “Nuttin’s”. This, however, did not impress Marcel.

Instead, Marcel arched an eyebrow, stuck her nose in the air and haughtily exclaimed, “Excuse me,” then strode right past the crowd.

It warmed this daddy’s heart to see that my not yet two-year old girl already knew how to deal with teen-age boys.