Noah
was born just after 9:00 am on December 12, 1969. It had recently snowed: a
crisp, thin, white layer sparkled outside the living room window. I woke up
just after 7:00 in the morning with a slight twinge in my lower back, the kind
of ache anyone who has ever had menstrual cramps would recognize immediately.
Wearing
my old yellow flannel nightgown, I padded barefoot into the kitchen. My father,
flying out the door to get to the train on time, was quickly peeling his
morning banana. My mother, preparing to leave for work, was less pressed for
time. She was still at home by 8:00, when the dull back-ache turned into
breath-shortening, wavelike belly cramps. The cramps were regular and evenly
spaced, delicately knotted macramé that wrapped around the melon my belly had
become. That melon, I knew, was the sinew and spirit of another human being who
had come one night under a vast and deep dark velvet desert sky while I
imagined that all the stars had journeyed down to earth.
Over
and through the knottings, I breathed shallowly, as I'd been taught by the
Lamaze instructor. Panting as evenly as possible, I worked at undoing each
knot, trying to maintain a sense of calm. Panic imperils consciousness, I told
myself. Consciousness is required to overcome the pain caused by tension.
I
huffed away, squatting on my hands and knees in the center of my mother's
carved maple bed as she, poised carefully on the edge, scrutinized the round
face of the clock-radio and monitored the passage of time between contractions.
The knots were 10 minutes apart. "I think it has to be every 5 minutes," my
mother offered. "I'd feel much better," she added, "if you'd let me take you to
the hospital."
"Don't
be silly, Mom," I said. "you go to work. This is supposed to take eight hours."
Why "supposed to"? And why "eight hours"? I wondered. (Perhaps I was
associating labor with "work" and assuming that one is supposed to put in an
eight-hour work-day. Or perhaps I was recalling my most recent visit with my
ob-gyn, who had suggested an appointment the following week. When I mentioned
that I was having a baby this weekend, he waved his hand airily and said,
"First babies are always late. Make an appointment.")
"Would
you like me to wait with you?" Mom asked. I waved her off, reminding her that
my friend Nancy had said she'd come stay with me if I needed help. Reluctantly
(Did she know? Did we both know?) my gentle-hearted mother left the house.
Within
a few moments of her departure, the silent house filled with knotted waves,
forming an obstinate bulge in the air around me. A presence, no longer
internal, took up the energy in the room and surrounded my body with an
invisible casing. I phoned my OB's office. His answering service informed me
that he was not yet there, was not available. Not there? Too bad for him, I
thought, and ended the conversation without leaving a message. I decided to try
him again in a few minutes and, in the meantime, prepare for a trip to the
hospital, where I knew I was ultimately expected. I padded off to my room,
found the dress my friend Agnese had given me - a durable, once-bright-yellow
denim tent, now faded to a pale winter sunbeam - and carried it down the cellar
stairs to the ironing board. As I turned on the iron, a viselike bolt gripped
my belly, and suddenly I was unable to concentrate on steaming out the
wrinkles. Somehow having the presence of mind to turn off the iron, I climbed
the stairs to the kitchen and telephoned Nancy, who had just had a baby of her
own.
"I
think you'd better come over here," I said.
"When?"
she wanted to know.
"Oh,
I guess in a couple of hours," I replied, laughing.
I
went into the living room and held up the afghan that my father's older sister
Rose had crocheted. As I leaned over to spread it out on the carpeted floor, a
gush of very warm fluid slopped out of my vagina. I fell to my knees, thinking,
Ooooh, it will take hours more and the baby will dry up in there with no water.
It was my first moment of panicky fear.
The
vaginal pressure was enormous: an almost unbearable weight pressed against my
labia from the inside out. I had been told to expect a "dogging pain," but was
unprepared for the sensation of sexual ecstasy, the voluptuous feeling of
penetration. Don't push, I told myself, don't push.
I
trekked back to the kitchen to call Nancy again and, without even thinking
about it, stuck the middle finger of my right hand up my rectum. As I did, I
knew absolutely that what my finger was tracing could only be the skull of a
baby. Oh, the baby is coming, I thought.
Quickly,
I dialed the number. "Nancy, come now," I begged, feeling an immense distance
separating us. Would she believe me? Would she come right away? No, I realized,
she would not come right away. In a flash, I saw that no matter when she came,
it would be too late.
Hanging
up the phone, I felt a single band of tension clamp around me. "Madre de Dios!"
I screamed aloud. Not being Catholic did not seem to matter at that moment.
"Mother of God," I pleaded silently, "what does it mean, this bearing down that
I cannot help?"
I
shuffled over to my blanket on the living room carpet. Crouched on my knees on
the little afghan, I caught the infant, who rushed from my vagina into the
small world between my legs, in the midst of an extraordinary orgasm from the
inside out. The child was a boy, and he seemed to cry out as I caught him, "I
am here!"
I
lifted him to my face, I touched his face with my tongue, aware that I was
tasting both him and myself at the same time. The still-attached umbilical cord
- a sinewy, dark-magenta rope - curled from his navel and disappeared under the
hem of my flannel nightgown. The placenta is still inside me, I thought. We are
still one. Pulling my nightgown aside with one hand, I put him to my breast.
It
was shortly after 9:00 am, and Nancy had not yet come. With the ponderousness
of the umbilical cord uppermost in my mind, I stood up and went off to the
kitchen. Fearing, in some utterly primitive way, the presence of the afterbirth
still inside me, I phoned Jacqueline, the Algerian-born Frenchwoman who lived
in the house behind ours. Within moments, she burst through the back door, her
eyes widening with shock when she saw me standing in the middle of the kitchen
with a minutes-old infant in my arms.
"Get
a knife," I commanded sharply, pointing to the kitchen utensils that sat in a
holder beside the gas stove. "Sterilize a knife."
Jacqueline
picked out a kitchen knife, and as she reached out to turn on the burner, the
knife fell abruptly from her hand. When it clattered to the floor, she
recovered her self-control and took command, ordering me off to the living
room. I obeyed instantly, and from the other room, I was able to hear her
speaking on the phone. Her English, normally excellent, vanished in her
excitation, but it quickly surfaced again as she reported an emergency to the
operator.
Suddenly,
Nancy arrived - followed by a host of others. The first policeman to burst
through the front door turned away instantly at the sight of a woman in a faded
flannel nightgown, sitting in the middle of the room and cradling a naked
newborn in her arms. In a matter of moments, Nancy and Jacqueline were hovering
over the woman; two men in blue were standing guard at the front door; and two
others, who had summoned an ambulance, were waiting for it to arrive. It came.
Mother and child were wrapped in one blanket and carried by stretcher out of
the house.
The
obstetrician, alerted by the ambulance driver, was waiting just inside the
emergency room door. Obviously frustrated and concerned, he began to pour out
what appeared to be a multitude of pent-up admonishments: "You should have
called me! You could have died..."
From
the emergency room table, with Noah still at my breast, I waved my hand airily.
"You should congratulate me," I retorted. "I did a good job."
PART
II : HIGH COMEDY
Jacob
was born at 3:20 am on July 29, 1981. His father and I had spent the previous
day hoisting slab lumber from a nearby mill into the back of our old truck,
unloading it at home - a very small house we had built ourselves - and setting
to work on a privy fence to separate our backyard from the adjacent parksite.
Gordon had sunk the posts, and I had nailed the boards up on the crosspieces.
Stopping
to enjoy the breezes coming off the lake, we decided to finish leveling off the
post the next day. Then we barbecued supper for Noah, his two visiting friends,
and ourselves. With the stone barbecue pit I'd made now fully enclosed within
the new fence, everything felt fine.
We
settled in around 10:00. Gordon and I slept, as usual, in the big bedroom. The
children camped out on the front porch in their sleeping bags. Sometime after
midnight, I woke up restless and decided to slip into Noah's room and curl up
on my side by myself. After a while, I woke up again, this time with amniotic
fluid gushing out all over my legs. It was a strange sensation - as hot as
urine, but as sudden and uncontrollable as the floosh of menstrual blood.
I
was upright in a flash. Where are the contractions? I wondered. I headed for
the living room and turned on the light to check the time: just after 3:00 am.
Then I padded into the bedroom and turned on the overhead light to wake Gordon.
He came awake instantly and pulled his clothes on. Remembering the importance
of evacuating before giving birth, I proceeded to the bathroom, but as I sat on
the toilet, one protracted contraction tightened around my abdomen. I had
perfect recall of that viselike knot, only this time I knew what it meant.
Well, that's it, I thought. Too late to evacuate.
Emerging
from the bathroom, I reached mentally past the contraction, which had already
moved outside me. Gordon, sitting at our old oak dining room table, was madly
trying to read the copy of Spiritual Midwifery I had borrowed a
few months earlier. "You don't have time for that," I told him.
Then
I noticed that he had already set a big pot of water to boil on the stove.
"Should I wake the kids?" he asked. Making a quick decision for privacy, I
replied, "No, let them sleep." He nodded, and I went back to the bedroom.
While
squatting on the bed, I tried to decide what to do. The hospital, a brand new
12-bed building, was less than five minutes away on foot. But I had no time to
walk there...or ride there. In fact, I had no time to go there at all. Of that
I was quite sure. Then again, there was Eva, the Swedish-trained nurse-midwife
whose help I would have liked. But at a party the week before, I had asked her
if she would come to the house if I had no time to get to the hospital.
Exchanging glances with the head nurse, who was also at the party, Eva seemed
to imply that the idea was preposterous. How could anyone not have time to go
to a hospital? their glances seemed to say. These back-to-the-land
mothers...always trying to have their babies at home!
From
my solitary place on the low, wide bed, I swore at the entire medical
establishment. I clenched my jaw and deliberately tightened the floor of my
pelvis, holding the baby back. Returning to the task at hand, I reasoned: If
Eva was not on duty and could not come or, worse yet, was on duty but would not
come, I'd be alone again. Gordon would be there, but although he had once been
an LPN, he was clearly not prepared for the immediate assignment. I saw no
choice; if I wanted someone with me, I'd have to ask Gordon to wake Elly. Elly
was our next-door neighbor and an RN. She also kept a sterile kit at home.
I
called Gordon, and he came to the bedroom. But when he saw me squatting on my
hands and knees, with my naked rump in the air, he turned on his heels,
muttering, "Wash my hands..." and rushed off to the bathroom. "Call Elly!" I
cried after him.
Even
though I was still on my hands and knees, my hearing suddenly became very
acute. I could hear Gordon on the phone in the next room: "Glenn? This is Gord.
Could you ask Elly to come over. I think the baby's coming."
You
think the baby's coming? I echoed to myself. And suddenly, I
laughed. I could not help it - the man's hesitation struck me as funny. I
laughed at the ridiculousness of it all. Suddenly, I was looking down a tunnel
the long way around, as if a telescope inside me - that was somehow outside me
- was turned backwards.
As
I laughed, the baby's head popped out. I tightened my pelvic floor muscles and,
turning my head, noticed Gordon at the doorway. Imagining how ludicrous I must
have looked, reared up on my haunches with a baby's head sticking out of me, I
laughed again. This time, the baby simply fell out into Gordon's out-stretched
hands.
"A
boy!" he said. The baby who we knew for sure would be a girl did not even mewl.
Gordon lay him in my arms. "Hello, darling," I whispered to him just as Elly
came into the room. It was 3:15 am.
Elly,
having brought her sterile kit, helped Gordon cut the umbilical cord. While he
took the now-freed baby to the kitchen sink for a bath, Elly sat comfortably
next to me on the bed. Holding a white enamel dishpan, she patiently awaited
the expulsion of the placenta. When it emerged, she inspected it carefully,
plopped it into the pan, and carried the pan - with its luminous, bloody
contents - to the kitchen to show Gordon.
In
an instant, the washed and freshly swaddled baby was back in bed, and the bed
was remade around us. Literally tucked in, I marveled at the tiny newborn in my
arms, the precious fruit of our labors. Leaning back in the clean pillows and
savoring the fresh sheets, I looked up gratefully. "This is very civilized," I
said appreciatively.
Elly,
late-come midwife of the manor, smiled generously. Gord beamed appreciatively.
The sky over the lake was just starting to pale.
*
* * * * * * *
Note
from Laura: After reading this story, I asked Claire (as she likes to be
called) why she felt the doctor was so nasty towards her after the birth of her
first child. This was her reply:
I
had talked with the family OB when I was about 6 months pregnant with Noah,
because I'd heard a story about a woman who'd given birth at Drop City (a
commune in Colorado in the late '60's) in a circle of people, drumming - the
baby was said to have shot out of her across the circle of people...Also I'd
seen a film about Eskimo or Inuit people, in which a woman sent her mother out
of the shelter when she was about to give birth because (in the film anyway, I
haven't checked this out with my Inuit friends) women were supposed to be alone
with their infants at the moment of birth - and this woman did it, clearly, on
her knees to gain the assistance of gravity. The family OB muttered darkly
something about "primitive" (do you think he had seen the film?) so I chose
another OB. I don't know exactly why he bawled me out, he never did explain and
I never bothered to ask. Maybe he was up tight because he had not recognized
that another of his patients was carrying twins until he had her on the
delivery table...(she happened to be in the bed next to me)...
There
is another piece of this story, however: my mother, at the age of 45, had given
birth to my kid sister in the car (the front seat, I believe) on the way to
that same hospital. One of the docs who was on duty in the ER when Noah and I
were brought in was a family friend, Ben Kurshan, the MD who'd been out playing
golf when my sister was born. What I was told was that when he heard about or
saw the gurney with Noah and me on it, he went immediately to a phone, called
another family friend and said, "Beverly, the Weintraubs did it again!"