
When my
daughter was born, my life went from one of total
freedom to one of
slave labor. What a lucky man I am.
By
Terence Loose
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T |
he first hint of the changes fatherhood
would bring came over eight months before my daughter Leila was born. And it
was not subtle. My wife Gayl and I were cruising our
32-foot sailboat through the South Pacific, living as wanderers and letting
warm trade winds and our fickle hearts dictate which anchorage we next called
home. We had crossed over 3,000 miles of ocean from mainland Mexico, explored
the Marquesan Islands, and had found a remote atoll
in the Tuamotus named Tahanea that fulfilled almost
every requirement for paradise: Crystal clear water; only two other boats –
four good friends; abundant sea life; completely uninhabited. We were enjoying
our second week of diving with the local sharks and manta rays and watching
tropical sunsets fade behind swaying palms and our plan was to sail to a nearby
atoll where, according to a radio friend, perfect surf was currently firing –
the final ingredient of heaven.
Then, we discovered that Gayl
was pregnant. We were overjoyed, of course, but it presented a dilemma. We had
been living “on the hook” in the South Pacific’s wild west
for seven weeks and the closest thing to fresh greens was the growth under our
keel. Suddenly vitamin supplements seemed cruelly insufficient for the mother
of my child. And Tahanea, for all its glory, was
anything but fertile – nothing more than a ring of reef in the sea, the most we
could hope for was a diet of coconuts and fresh ahi.
So, just a few moments after I
toasted the nature gods for blessing us, my broad smile faded as my island
paradise turned from oasis to prison.
“You need veggies,” I said,
thereby killing any possibility of ever sounding brave or swashbuckling again.
After an hour of networking
over the high frequency radio I discovered there was a chance at produce a
night’s sail away at an inhabited atoll named Fakarava.
“Calm down,” Gayl said. “Let’s
sail to the wave, you can surf for a few days, then we’ll go to Fakarava.”
Bolstering my Woody Allen image
by summoning visions of a poor, emaciated baby, denied vital nutrients because her
father had to get tubed, I waved her off. “No, no,
no. We’re heading for produce.”
I was still the captain of the
household (but oh, how that would change!) and so the following
At first it seemed promising.
Though it too was merely a ring of coral in a desert of ocean, Fakarava boasted a large quay, a school and church and talk
of two markets. We started down the atoll’s sole crushed-coral road.
An hour later we were assured
there was not so much as a lima bean in sight. The supply ship had come weeks
ago and was due sometime that week – “we think,” said the local market owner.
So, as perfect waves poured un-ridden onto an isolated reef that I had quit my
job, sold my house, and sailed over 3,000 miles to surf, I sat and waited for
fruit.
The schooner came three days
later, we loaded up on as much produce and fuel as possible – about a week’s
worth – and bolted for the waves. We arrived just in time…for the last echoes
of swell to peter out and the wind to change to unfavorable.
In month five of Gayl’s pregnancy, after exploring the thankfully bountiful
“Get real,” Gayl said. “You’re
back on land now, in the 21st century.”
So, just weeks after I had been
commanding a small boat on the great South Pacific Ocean, catching my dinner
and facing down squalls (and yes, tracking down treasures of leafy greens), I
found myself in workshops discussing nipple confusion, breast pumps and fundal massage. I practiced swaddling, diaper changing and
CPR on plastic dolls. I actually read The Girlfriends’ Guide to Pregnancy. I
also learned that, given enough technical description and illustrations of the
breasts’ inner workings and nurturing qualities, the healthy male can actually
be stripped of all his lust for them. Yes, there were times when I would have
gladly given up my cell phone and two-gig hard drive for the naïve chauvinism
of the 50s.
Ironically, the only thing even
remotely familiar to me came during the breast-feeding class when the “football
hold” was discussed.
“I know that one!” I cried.
“Good, now teach it to mom,”
the nurse said.
Of course, I wasn’t the sole
soul mate in these classes. In fact, the classes were made up almost
exclusively of couples. I took this as a good sign, a refreshing reality check
to the consistently reinforced notion that our nation’s family values are
crumbling. I was proud of my fellow future dads for their involvement, their
bravery.
Of course, I kept that
touchy-feely sentiment to myself.
Besides, the main effect the
classes had on me, I think, was to scare the living hell out of me. I’m a bit
of a hypochondriac as it is, so when I was shown list after list of things that
could go wrong with a newborn – choking, suffocating, jaundice, drowning, six distinct kinds of diaper rash…well, let’s just say I
displayed signs of the first three.
Then there was the infamous
video night in Lamaze class. Five Births, I think ours was called, and it was
designed to prepare us for the sometimes bumpy, always gory pathway of birth. I
squirmed through a viewing of everything from the trouble-free vaginal to the
emergency C-section birth, and yes, I’m admitting right here in print that I
worried more for myself than Gayl. After all, from what I saw, everyone in the
delivery room was focused on the mother – who the hell was going to catch me
when I keeled over?
The class gave us good advice
on lifestyle preparation, however, and as the big day neared our home took on a
different look. I spent mornings putting together the bassinet, the changing
table, the stroller, while Gayl washed baby clothes and organized everything
from newborn diapers to six-month-old sleepers.
In the final week I stopped
going surfing, or to the bookstore, for fear of being unavailable when Gayl
needed to get to the hospital. We labeled every pain Gayl felt as the possible
onset of labor.
So it was rather anticlimactic
when Gayl’s water broke without even a labor pinch.
We drove to the hospital calmly, checked in at
Then, reality hit. It came down
like a hammer and I watched Gayl’s casual smile cloud
over and her brow go tense.
“Whoa,” she said, and I knew we
were in trouble. This was a woman who had smiled as she clutched the helm of
our boat through a thundering electrical squall 1,000 miles offshore.
I looked at the contraction
monitor. It read 30.
“That’s probably pretty bad,
honey,” I lied. For all I knew it was a scale of 500.
Within an hour the monitor was
reading in the mid-forties and Gayl was shaking like a woman possessed. Trying
to crush my hand to a pulp replaced breathing exercises and I wisely buried the
idea of picture-taking.
Now, I know what you all are
thinking: Here comes the cliché where the woman yells “Drugs! Give me the
drugs!”
But you’re wrong.
I called for the drugs – for
Gayl, mostly. She, amazingly, was reluctant.
“I really…thought…I could…do
this,” she managed to say.
“Who are you trying to
impress?” I said. “I would have called for the epidural in the second
trimester.”
Half an hour later, after the epidural
had taken effect, Gayl was sitting up taking my picture as I watched the
contraction monitor approach 80.
This meant my moment of truth
was coming. By
But as Leila eased closer to
our world I found I couldn’t help myself, I had to watch. I wanted so much to
see the face of the girl that had dominated our thoughts for the better part of
a year, who would define our lives from this hour on, that
the fear around the more gruesome part of childbirth disappeared.
To my surprise, I did not
faint, I did not turn away; I watched as my daughter entered our world. And it
was wonderful.
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L |
ong before my wife and I set
sail we bought a house. Now, anyone who has ever applied for a home loan can
appreciate the forests of paperwork and FBI-like probing involved. What I found
interesting was that every time there was a decision to be made or document to
sign – whether it was solidifying the walk-through date or signing the loan
papers – I was the one called. “Oh, and you better bring Gayl, too,” was the
implication. And this in spite of the fact that I was a writer who on a good
day had trouble finding my wallet, while Gayl managed money for a living. But
no matter how many times I insisted that Gayl represented half of any decision
– not to mention half the money – the call came to my office.
So, when Gayl and I were
readying ourselves in the hospital to move our new
family home and a nurse came in with a slew of papers, I handed two-day-old
Leila to my wife and pulled out a pen.
The nurse walked right by me.
She set up a table for my wife
and plopped the pile of papers in front of her. Most of them had to do with
Leila – information about car seats, application for social security number,
the tyke’s official discharge papers, county parenting help lines – but Gayl’s was the only signature necessary. Due to extreme
sleep deprivation at the time, I can’t swear to this, but I maintain that I did
not sign a single document.
With everything in order, a
volunteer orderly came in with a luggage cart and a wheelchair. He and I loaded
up the cart and then helped Gayl into the wheelchair, Leila in her arms.
“All ready?” he asked.
“Let’s go home,” I said, and
took a step toward the wheelchair.
He cut me off.
“Sorry, hospital rules,” he explained,
and with a wink, added, “You can get the luggage cart.”
At the time I felt a bit dissed. But over the next few weeks I would come to see
those last few hours in the hospital as a sort of benevolent conspiracy on the
staff’s part to ease me into my first month’s job as “father,” a misnomer if
ever I heard one. More accurate would be any of the following titles: Waiter,
butler, maid, slave.
The first few weeks of my
fatherhood were spent learning to cook, do laundry, clean, and, of course,
change diapers. Sadly, they were all equally alien tasks for me. Two years on a
boat in the tropics had left me ill-prepared in almost all departments. The one
dish I could prepare with any confidence was raw fish, sashimi; clothes washing
had involved leaving surf trunks out during a squall; and cleaning was done
with a deck brush.
In fact, virtually every skill
I had picked up seemed all wrong. If Leila was in any danger of blowing away,
for instance, I could tie a hell of a trucker’s hitch. If her bottom began growing
green algae or attracted barnacles, I had the tool. Diaper rash, however,
remained a mystery only the gods could solve.
The parenting classes helped a
little but changing, soothing and burping a live, squirm-happy child turned out
to be a bit harder than appeasing a plastic doll. Not to mention much messier.
But I found love can get you through the worst of diaper blowouts.
The one skill from our voyage
that came in handy was the ability to function on almost zero sleep. Crossing
the Pacific had involved 25 straight days of sleeping in two-hour shifts with
the added bonus of a constant underlying anxiety that at any moment all hell
could bust loose. That was now paying off big-time.
Gayl was now nothing more than
a milk factory, and the factory needed help. Because it would take weeks for
Leila’s stomach to grow large enough to accommodate more than a few ounces
of milk – a few hours worth, that is – we never got more than a few hours sleep
those first 14 days. I learned to do everything in a zombie state. I spent
entire days in my wife’s pink bathrobe; my tan faded; I grew lots of facial
hair; my vocabulary became monosyllabic; writing a grocery list became taxing.
In short, our life became, and
remains, profoundly different than just months ago. Living on the ocean our
clock was nature; our plans revolved around her temperament. When the wind came
up, we moved, when it rained, we stayed in, when the sun shone, we played.
Now, as parents, we remain on
nature’s clock, but it ticks away not in the wind or the sun, but the moods and
needs of an eight-pound miracle.
Our world is now focused and on
purpose. Balance has not yet come, but then, the only way to find balance is to
test its edges. And where before nature’s rewards were grand overtures,
they now are subtle and intimate.
Yes, our lives have changed
immeasurably and the nights are sometimes long. But then, somewhere in those
first few weeks Leila looked me right in the eyes and smiled. And though I know
it was probably nothing more than gas or a developing nervous system, it was
still more beautiful than any sunset I ever saw, any wave I ever surfed. Because it was my first true recognition that I was a dad. þ