I’m too pissed you’ll have to drive your self to
hospital.
I was shocked
not so much by his response but by my waters, by the amount of water. It wasn’t
a drip or a slow leak but a gush.
Within minutes
I had exhausted the absorbency of a large bath towel. It was hard to waddle
around the house gathering my stuff for the hospital with the towel bunged
between my legs. When I’d rang the hospital and said my waters had broken shall
I come in now, they asked if I was sure.
Sure I was sure,
when the waters broke it had sounded like a champagne cork pop. I was squatting
down, I couldn’t bend to gather the bedroom detritus into a pile of rather than
a scatter, so I was squatting. I was in Ruby’s room, my six year old, she had
long awaited the birth of her new sibling. Being an only child didn’t suit her,
she would often be at parks ,or on beachside holidays or wake up in the
mornings wondering if today she would make a new friend. Sometimes Ruby would
have this distant look in her eyes, I took it as a look of loneliness, or maybe she was just thinking
about what was for dinner that night.
It had taken
quite a while to get pregnant for the second time, for a short time we had
considered adoption. But there I was finally about to birth. As I squatted and
heard the champagne cork pop sound Ruby must have seen my colour change. What’s up mum? Ruby asked I’ll be off to hospital soon pet me waters
have just broken. Leaving the detritus I shuffle sideways barely daring to
move to the bathroom, gushing.
I make a cup of
tea, true crisis response for an expat Brit and ring my sister who was to stay
the night with Ruby until the baby had been born. I waddle around the house tidying
up, making Ruby’s lunch for school the next day and patting the dog.
By the time we
leave to go to the hospital it is after ten, Ruby is asleep and I am onto my
third bath towel.
I put my stuff
in the back of the car, James wordlessly goes to sit in the back seat.
It’s not chauffeur driven I say. He moves to the front seat,
looking ahead, middle distance.
I push the
towel firmly between my legs, getting ready to reverse out of the driveway.
The hospital is
about a 30 minute drive away. As we hit the main arterial Hoddle Street the
traffic goes into crawl mode.
I pull over
into a bus lane suddenly.
What are you pulling over for? James asks
Because I’m having a contraction, I reply focusing on the downward pull of
the ache now spreading from my lower abdomen into my lower back.
We arrive, I
park, throw some coins into the parking meter, appalled that I need so many coins
so late at night in front of a maternity hospital.
I gather my
stuff, my steely reserve and head to the main entrance. I realize that though
James is with me, I am clearly in this birthing business alone.
I’m admitted to
hospital after evidence of broken waters has been produced. The plastic bound
bracelet with all relevant details is clamped to my wrist and ankle.
I had gone to
hospital a few weeks earlier convinced that I was going into labour then. It
had felt like my insides were hanging out , my vagina was heavy, I thought
maybe the baby’s head was protruding, that I was already 10 cms dilated, or maybe
I was a freak and had dilated 20 cms and the baby head first was coming on down.
I rushed to the
emergency ward. After a perfunctory examination I was told no I wasn’t in
labour, and that the downward thrust I was experiencing was just vulval
varicosisties. Back home and still not entirely convinced I had taken a quick
peek in the mirror, it was like a piece of suppurating fruit, bluish purple,
swollen.
My circulatory
system had worked over time during this pregnancy, the supporrating fruit was
complimented by the varicose veins on my legs which had grown to such
proportions during the pregnancy that when I was swimming laps in the Reservoir
pool one day a man comes up to me points at my legs and says:
Oh my god where did you get those 3d tattoos from?
Because they are fully sick man, fully sick.
There is no
such man, but it’s a great joke which I will use again and again. My
varicosities at the time didn’t feel like a joke though they looked more like
blue backed beans than veins.
Meanwhile it’s
past mid night, I am in a cubicle with a bed, a chair, some magazines and an
array of hospital paraphernalia. The contractions are coming in slow waves,
radiating out from the pelvis region. The hospital noises, the beeps and
monitors and rise and fall of James snoring is the sound track to the onset of
labour.
I heave and
rage against the pain, hands on the side of the hospital bed, leaning in to each contraction and texting UNGGHHH
to my mum and sister who were in the Uk, so that they could get a sense of how
the labor was progressing.
Intermittently midwifes
poke their heads through the curtain and ask: how you going? Fine I say waving them off. I don’t want
intervention, the thought of a fetal monitor strapped to my midriff or worse
still a hand touching me between the waves is too much to handle. So I press on,
waiting for each role of pain to wash through me.
At 7am though
the midwives say enough, they roll up their sleeves, transfer me from the
cubicle and move me to a ‘birthing room,’
We are going on a break at 10am and want this baby
outa here by then, so get on the bed and start pushing.
I glance over
at James he is disconnected and slightly ashen faced.
I chew on a
jelly snake take a suck of gas and promptly throw up. The mid wives urge me to
bear down and push. I am happy now to be guided by them.
Before I had Ruby,
I had read everything there was to read about the impending birth. I had a
carefully written birth plan punctuated with lavender compresses, back rubs and
lindt chocolate for energy.
A superfluous
document in the scheme of things: Ruby’s birth was a 36 hour job and really
like a rave party full of e’s: episiotomy, epidural, exhausting. The chord was prolapsed
and Ruby was blue on arrival. Ruby was then swept away by a sea of midwives and
doctors to be revived. The birth plan I had initially thrust towards midwives
like the Bill of Rights, had flittered to the floor like a losers crumpled tats
lotto ticket around the 15 hour mark.
After Rubys’
birth I had arrived home really sore. I had to sit on a rubber ring for days, wincing
endlessly from the episiotomy.
I was
overwhelmed by the flowers, so many in fact that there was almost a funereal,
morbid air to the house. Despite the flowers, the cards and the welcome home, and
Ruby, I felt I had failed in a big way, that my body had let me down.
At work I had
thrown up a lot during the pregnancy, once in a dumpster just at the back
entrance in view of customers. I had to sit down a lot too, only able to stand
for about an hour or two at a time, what with the varicosities and all.
At 27 weeks my
manager presented me with a bunch of flowers and said don’t come in again after this week, I took the floral arrangement wordlessly,
wondering how a bunch of flowers would pay the mortgage.
I’d thrown up again
that morning, when he told me not to return and gave me the flowers, though mortified I had thought, fair enough ,
it’s not a good look, throwing up at work, I was a chef at the time.
I went home 27
weeks pregnant, sat on the couch and cried. What would I do now? I couldn’t
possibly go back to being a chef. What other skills did I have? I began to eat,
croissants, muffins, any thing with a high carb’ load and a sugary edge. James
would come home from work each night and ask:
Still
crying?
Yeh I’d sniff and eat another muffin.
I pilled on
20kgs.
Then I birthed
and my body didn’t do what I thought it would do. I felt weak, stupid and inept.
However when I
arrived home with Ruby, there were streamers and balloons festooning the iron
lace work on the outside of the house. Inside there were more balloons, the
tiny crib that Ruby was to sleep in was bedecked with streamers. As I entered
the living room of our tiny rented house in Moonee Ponds, James glided passed
me, pressed play on the CD player and the Eagles ‘new kid in town’ played. His eyes filled with tears of joy he
looked down in his first born and I had a let down.
Jessicas’ birth
was a breeze in comparison with Ruby’s and it was accomplished sans birth plan
and drug free, except for a quick suck of gas. Then when Jess she popped out it
was a calm and beautiful moment, her shock of black hair curling slightly, her
head gently to one side, her face so sweet and for sure there was a smile
playing on her lips. The midwives
weighed her quickly, did all the testing things and handed her too me. It was
12 minutes past nine, they still had time to wash their hands, sign off on
paper work and get to their tea break with another birth chalked up on their
watch.
The afternoon
of the birth of Jess, Ruby came to visit her new sister .Ruby lay next to
Jessica, the look of contentment and bliss on her face was magical and it casts such a spell on me
that I don’t even call James on the snoring business, or the I’m too pissed to
drive you to hospital line. It can, I decide all wait until I get home, where
it can be discussed over a nice cup of tea and a home baked item.
Two days after the birth: I find myself teeth clenched
and white knuckled at the entrance of
the hospital having just been discharged. I am holding the new born Jessica,
whilst fitting the baby seat into the back of the car. James stares at me
blankly : I just didn’t have time to do
it, he says.
Could you hold the baby maybe I say wrenching the nut and bolt into
place securing the baby’s capsule to the anchor point.
As we pull up
to the house my neck strains to get a glance of the streamers and balloons that
I am sure will be wafting in the breeze at the entrance of the house.
I get home anticipating
that along with the festoon of balloons and streamers a lavish banquet of soft cheese, crustacians
and a variety of carefully selected chocolate items to be laid out. I was
gagging during the pregnancy for anything that would give me listeria or
botchelism, tempted at times to lick the rubber seal on the fridge door.
But there are
no streamers, no wafting in the wind of Wey Hey it’s a girl sign. I assume then
that all the deco’s must be inside.
But all that is
festooning the place are the weekend papers strewn over the dining table,
unwashed dishes adorn the sink and kitchen bench, no decos, no welcome home you
little bloody legend you sign and no food, not a scrap to be seen.
I lean heavily
on the edge of the kitchen bench feeling a well of anger:
‘You could have tidied the house’ I say, ‘you could have put some food in the fridge.’
Prey let me
continue:
‘Any thing’ I say ‘you
could have bought any thing for lunch. I am starving, I have just fricken
birthed, but please, shall I just pop down to the supermarket and get some
fricken food in the house so that I can eat some something’
But wait
there’s more:
‘You could have bought some soft cheese, a slither
would have been fine. You know I’ve been gagging for soft cheese for nine
months. I’ve been gagging for prawns, you could have bought some prawns for lunch,
made a salad, bought some bread.’
I open the
fridge again, waves of anger and disbelief rolling through my body, there’s not
even any milk in the fridge. I have just birthed and there’s not even a bottle
on milk in the fridge.
‘You could have tidied the house, you could have
bought some food.’ I am
shrill now and light headed, knowing soon that I will have to breast feed and
that somehow I am going to have to remember how to breast feed away from the
hospital ward, away from the press of a button and magically appearing lactation
consultant who on command would do this strange kind of rolling folding
movement with her arms by way of demonstrating how to feed a newborn. I am
mesmerized by the lactation demonstration and at the same time bewildered. My coordination
is not great, I’m no smooth mover on the dance floor. I high five myself when I
have the opportunity to rub my head and pat my stomach. I look nonchalant when
I m doing it, but I’m quietly rapt’ because I don’t do coordination well, but
can make that movement look smooth.
Having the
lactation consultant, a slim woman, straight blond hair, smelling slightly of
Issy Miake perfume, doing the lactation demonstration is enthralling and
terrifying at the same time. There’s fat
chance that I can replicate the moves, get the baby to latch on, not get
cracked nipples and not drop the baby.
I am standing
in the kitchen, a mounting sense of disbelief that there is nothing in the
fridge to eat and that I am going to have to breast feed the baby without the
lactation nurse on call.
‘I can’t even make a cup of tea, I have just
birthed and I can’t even make a cup of tea’
The baby starts
crying, I’m going to have to put the rant on hold, unclip my maternity bra, sit
down and figure out how to breast feed on my own.
There’s not even any bread, my energy galvanized by anger is
beginning to falter, ‘I have just birthed
and I can’t even make a sandwich.’
James has that
look on his face, it is slightly sour, but un flinching, he knows that he is in
the wrong, but wont admit it, so he does this flip where somehow it becomes my
fault.
‘Ok he says OK I’ll down to the
market, I’ll go down there right now shall I right now and get some bloody
prawns then shall I will that make you feel better?’ he says
I am defeated, the
baby is crying, my breasts spring a leak. I look at him.
‘It’s about the prawns,’ I say quietly as I pick up the baby and
retreat to the couch.
December 2004 and so began my comedy odyssey
2 comments:
Ahh Justine. I love a birth story, but this one is different. It's more that a birth story. You've captured the internal dialog we all have during these intense life changing times. And added a touch of humor! Thank you. It stayed with me for some time after reading it. It took me back to my children's births and to the day you dropped in after Xavier was born with cake and flowers from your garden. I'll always remember your kindness. I hope to see your face more often. Kox
Aw thanks Katie.
I've had this story for nearly 10 years.
I've said most if it in shows but it's great to get written feedback as well as laughter.
Hope all's well with you and yours.x
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