Saturday, November 22, 2008

Endgame

Julie and Lyla are taking naps. I'm supposed to be cleaning the house.

You want to know some of the details, right?

We went to the hospital on Wednesday morning. They called at around 8:00 AM that morning to schedule the induction, and Julie said groggily that we'd be there in an hour.

It was more like two. While Julie took a shower, I dropped the dogs off at the vet for boarding (they're still there sharing a giant dog-run; we'll pick them up Monday), went to Starbucks, finalized the bag packing, and took my own shower.

In the car finally, Julie asked, "How have you been this morning?"

I answered honestly: "Well, I've nearly burst into tears at various moments."

"When? Why?"

"On the way to Starbucks, for instance. This is big, you know. I mean, getting married was big too, but this is way bigger. Life is involved here. We're going to witness the creation of life." I changed lanes and looked over at Julie, waiting for her reaction to my sentiment.

"You are such a pansy little girl."

God, I love her.

Our birthing suite was awesome. The bed looked extremely high-tech, like you could probably sleep in it with a modicum of comfort but that, if needed, it could transform like Optimus Prime into a futuristic birthing contraption.

They gave Julie an IV and a pill to weaken her iron-clad cervix door. The pill wasn't an oral one. The nurse walked right up to the door, knocked, and left the pill outside like the poisonous apple in Snow White.

Peeing was tricky with the IV. I'm just saying. I became a minor expert at unplugging the various apparatuses Julie was hooked up to, draping the cords on her shoulders, and following her with the IV cart into the bathroom. The toilet had a shield to capture her pee, absolutely disgusting, but necessary for the nurses to keep track of things. As a lad, I saran-wrapped my mom's toilet on April Fool's Day. Same thing, basically.

By about 1:00 PM, Julie was ravenously hungry. This could be because during her entire pregnancy, she ate constantly. Upon requesting food this day, however, she was told she shouldn't eat until evening. Evening! I began to regret the earlier Starbucks run; a cream cheese danish was the only thing in her stomach, and now most of that had been converted to pee that sat bubbling in her bathroom's pee catcher.

"Can I just have a bread stick?" she said to me after the "No food" nurse left.

"Huh?"

"One of those Handi-Snacks cheese and bread sticks. I just want one bread stick. Come on, buddy."

I looked around to make sure the room was empty.

"One, dude. Help a girl out."

I thought to myself, would this be the first of many? Would the nurse return just in time to witness the bread stick hand-off? I didn't want to get in trouble.

Ultimately I relented. I opened the package and removed one of the eight finger-bone-sized bread sticks. Julie clapped excitedly as I walked it to her.

"Enjoy it, woman. This is all you get."

"Mmm. Thank you, sir."

The nurse came in to do God-knows-what to Julie's pee catcher. Probably get a test-tube of it and run it through a centrifuge and then bake a cake. I said to the nurse, "So what's the rule with food for this hungry, hungry girl?"

"Sorry," she said, then turned to Julie. "But would you like some juice maybe?"

Julie nodded vigorously. The nurse left and moments later returned.

"I also smuggled you some saltines. Shh. Don't tell."

So far, what everyone told us about nurses was true: they are the ones that make all the difference.

Our room had a TV and DVD player, so during these events we watched "Enchanted," "The Devil Wears Prada," and "The Family Stone," all sucky girl movies that I say I hate but secretly love.

After a second cervix door weakening pill, Julie had some contractions, but none so bad that she had to hold her breath during them. They weren't a party either, though, so it was promising.

It was past 4:00 by this time, and Julie was desperate for a cheeseburger. Our second nurse walked in, and I shared with her Julie's hankering. No cheeseburgers allowed, but would she like a popsicle? More vigorous head nodding.

Our movie supply was rapidly diminishing, and the nurse told us that inductions could take a few days. We called Julie's twin sister Jen and requested more. As I chatted with her on the phone, Julie struggled to open a single Lifesaver from its plastic wrapper. "Will you do this?" she said. "I have monkey fingers."

At around 6:00, they fed Julie a simple dinner of sandwich and applesauce, and she inhaled it. The nurse explained that they would probably let Julie sleep the night and then go hard-core on induction stuff the next morning. Literally 10 minutes later, the resident doctor entered the room and informed us that she would be breaking Julie's water.

With what basically amounted to a crochet hook.

Certain things get hazy from this point on. Jen was there by this point, I believe, and both of us averted our gaze as the doctor uncorked Julie and caused an amniotic waterfall to spew from her.

Then the contractions really began. After an hour or two, Julie was dilated enough for the epidural. We ordered it, and she waited in occasional agony. Skip the next paragraph if you get squeamish about needles.

The anesthesiologist was almost a major low point in the day. Without going into too much detail, he struggled to find a spot that worked. He kept poking Julie's back with localized needles to find where the super needle could make it through. At least three pokes were unsuccessful. Now, I don't blame the guy for struggling, but he would not shut up, and this made me want to deck him. "Well hmm, that one didn't work. Let's see. Do you have back problems? Okay, here comes another one." At some point, I told him to knock off the narration. Finally, he did deliver the epidural, and it was good. I certainly respect the guy for not giving up.

After that, we slept. Slept during labor! Thank you, epidural. The sleep was constantly interrupted by nurses and doctors, not to mention the blood pressure cuff on Julie's arm that tightened every two minutes. But still, there was some sleep.

At 6:00 AM on Thursday, November 20th, exciting things happened. I'll breeze through this part, but let's just say that at 8:11, we had a baby.

Important to note:

- Our attending OB-GYN was not originally scheduled to deliver but switched shifts to be with us. Turns out she's Jen's doctor, knows my uncle, and went to the same college as us. And she was amazing. In addition to being the best possible combination of cheerleader and drill-sergeant, at one point she grabbed Julie's hand and brought it down to touch the top of her daughter's head. Talk about motivating you to push.

- Our night nurse's shift ended at 7:30 AM. She left to check out and then came back, off the clock, to be there for the delivery. Also amazing.

- Julie was a champion. At one point they had her pulling on a sheet wrapped around a bar at the end of the bed. She didn't cry, scream, or give up. Not that I would've blamed her for a second if she had.

- I was in charge of Julie's left leg. During contractions, I muscled her knee toward her chest. This was a good job because it kept me busy and allowed me whatever vantage point I wanted or needed at any given moment. I witnessed things that amazed and horrified me. As a moderately squeamish person, I wasn't sure how I would react. And now I can safely say that I loved and will forever treasure every moment of that birth.

- When our baby came out and was brought to Julie's arms, I cried. I was the only man in a room of women, and the newborn and I were the only ones crying. Suddenly a scissors appeared in my hand, then someone told me where to cut the cord, and I did. Life as we all knew it was profoundly, spectacularly altered.

Now we are home. And everything, everything, everything is perfect.






Postscript:

Thank you for reading this blog. I know a major reason that I wrote almost every day was because people were reading. As a guy who has always liked to write but rarely had much to say, I found my wife's pregnancy to be a strong muse. And now the text of this blog adds up to roughly 50,000 words. So what next? Who knows. I do know, though, that this blog is done. How do you keep up a blog called "My Wife Is Preggers" once your wife is no longer preggers?

Certainly there's more to say, but I don't honestly know if fatherhood will afford time to consistently write. Hell, I'll give it a shot anyway. Check out the new blog: Changing Lyla.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow Dan - what a remarkable ending to one stage and the beginning of another - I think you should get all of these entries printed into a book - then it could be sold at baby stores - like a manual for Dads :)
Great job - and Congratulations!
Angela S.

Anonymous said...

YAY!!!! I'M SO GLAD that you are going to try to keep writing! :) This blog was nothing short of outstanding and extremely entertaining!! Congrats DAD!!! :)

Unknown said...

I really hope you are able to keep up a blog on Lyla. It's the only way us out of towners get to feel like we are still a part of things:) I read the blogs of complete strangers...I will definitely continue to read yours :)

Pandora Wilde said...

I was really happy to have found this blog--I loved "Mr. A" and really missed it when you shut down.

So, you'll probably find me peeking in over at your new blog too--since I found you thru MooCow I think, I know the writing's good, having followed it for awhile now.

Congratulations, Mom and Dad, and keep the Desitin handy.