Meesh was laboring at home until midnight. She had been laboring since the midnight before. In between contractions (which apparently feel like a cross between a broken washing machine inside of your stomach and a little people wrestling match) Meesh would gaze into my eyes lovingly and soft as a baby's butt say "you okay, Matty. How you doin? How's it goin?" As I was about to answer the little people would start to wrestle and Meesh would grab a table, a couch, a dog, my head and yelp "Where the fuck is the hospital, Matt. What the fuck? I mean, seriously, THE FUCK!" So it is my friends, the contraction cliches are cliches because they are, well, totally cliche.
Our doula (oblongata) told us to get in the shower around 10 p.m. (two hours before the clock struck midnight, before princesses turn into pumpkins and queens into witches) and on that Meesh started bawling..."Why the fuck does she want me to get in the shower. She should get in the shower. A shower?? The hell is this game she's playing?" I turned on the shower, came back to Meesh who was squatting between a nook and a cranny and I said "I'm just going to leave the shower running and if you want to get in, it might feel warm and good and..." She said "Ohhh, you're on her side?" I didn't know who's side I was on at this point to be quite honest. My pained, warrior wife or the doula Meesh loved (until this point) who wanted only to help Meesh have the birth she dreamed of...all the while I am thinking about the water I am wasting, Earth Guilt as if being Jewish wasn't enough.
We got in the shower. The tears stopped. Meesh rested her body against mine. She was at peace. Got out of the shower. Got dressed. Then those rascally little people were like, fuck it, we want to have Wrestlemania in her belllllyyyy. Clock struck midnight. Princess Meesh was pumpkin-izing. We got in the car. That drive to the hospital is as it is in the films...surreal and slow. We get up to the room. Set up shop. Clary Sage and Peppermint oils in hand. Ipod playing Joni Mitchell (oddly, theatrical Meesh and Ghetto Meesh did not want to give birth hence no Beyonce or Babs...baby E V V Y (there mom) wanted to be birthed like a proper, poetic girl.
2 a.m. rolled around and Meesh was simply plum tuckered. Very hard to watch your wife in that much pain...heartbreaking...also hard to not laugh (that uncomfortable "i want to cry but instead I'm laughing" laugh). Needless to say, I had to bury my head a few times. And after nearly 24 hours of labor, Meesh essentially looked at the doula and looked at me and said "fuck you both...give me the epidural."
The epidural doctor arrived quickly. If you ever have to witness this act, just kill yourself. The doctor opens a suitcase that rivals a 007 assassin kit, throws a wall of sticky plastic on Meesh's back and starts building a house on it...pipes and hoses and needles, oh my! That was my first black out.
The epidural knocked us both out. We slept until 6 a.m. They took her off the epideral. And shortly thereafter she was 100 percent dilated. Ready to push. And then the door opened. Finally, our doctor had arrived. Oops, scratch that...our doctor is a young black woman. This doctor was a not that young white woman. I pull her aside before Meesh can freak out "where is our Doctor." And very matter-of-factly she says "she got suspended this morning for brawling over a C-section." Oh no she di'int. But, in fact, yes she did. So it was, the doctor we had spent nine months with was in hospital jail but this doctor loved my Ipod mix so I liked her.
She sat on the bed with Meesh and the pushing began. 25 minutes later a head was crowning (black out number 2). And then within moments, a face and a chest, arms, legs and the announcement "it's a girl!" B L A C K O U T #3. A girl? My brother has three sons. A girl? Everyone thought Meesh was carrying the way one does when they carry a BOY. A girl? And then some weird, you-have-a-baby-girl chemical kicks in and you start crying and your heart opens so wide and all you can hear in your head is your own voice saying "I have a daughter" and then you hear your voice but now British saying "Not Without My Daughter" and you think of Sally Field and then you remember the joke you had with someone about being parched and saying "Not Without My Water." And then...you are asked to cut the umbilical chord. You do, and then you properly black out.
9 comments:
Genius.
i was laughing and playing along and then suddenly the end of that post came, and i just started bawling. thanks mb/ evvy babby dadddddeeee
you rock matt... that's a lucky baby girl
VERY amazingkeshia!!! I knew you were having a girl... I just knew it!!! xoxoox
BTW... it's Veronica
damn i love u
meesh & evvy (take that gramma) r both v lucky girls
this time i hooted w laughter
& cried, remembering caitlyn's birth
which is when i decided i'd Much rather give birth 5 xs than watch my baby girl give birth once!
i totally concur
its an awful, heart-wrenching thing, watching ur most loved one give birth
but so worth the result!
i love u matty
is there anyone who is a more incredible writer than you?!!!
matty
amazing
so funny
so true
so honest
so vivid
so beautiful
so BRILLIANT
and soooooooo matty b
love it
love you
love evvy
love meesh, her belly and what popped out of it
love your family
feel honored to be a part of it
:)
xoxxo,
mere
Always love reading your posts--one just tops the next. I had to include the last one in my Friday line-up. . .Congrats on becoming a dad!
So proper. In evvy way.
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