Feb.24,
1984.This is the day when it all ends - people
giving seats to me on the bus, going right to
the front of every line, - my husband Rocky cleaning
out the cat litter box. My water breaks at 5:00
AM. Since I'm a week and a half overdue, I've
been ready for days. Rocky speeds me to Roosevelt
Hospital and goes to park the car. I stagger towards
the glass doors. They part. A guard sits at his
desk reading the NY Post.
"Get
me a wheelchair." I moan. He doesn't look
up. "We don't got any."
"Well
can't you send for one?"
"Ain't
nobody there till eight."
"You
mean you don't have any wheelchairs in this whole,
goddamn hospital."
My
insides feel like a washing machine on the heavy-duty
cycle.
"I
don't have to listen to that kinda talk."
He goes back to the Post.
I
stare at the bank of elevators looming across
the empty lobby, which seems as wide as a football
field. I get down on my hands and knees and crawl.
I finally reach the elevator and slam both the
up and down buttons. When it comes, I roll in
and am transported to the basement and several
other stops before I finally crawl out on the
fifth floor maternity ward. The head nurse greets
me,
"Honey
you picked a bad time to have a baby. We're full
up."But miraculously, she does manage to
dig up a wheel chair. She wheels me up and down
the hall knocking on doors, but as predicted,
there's no room at the inn. Suddenly a door is
flung open and a shrieking women is wheeled out
to the delivery room. We grab her room. Once inside,
we notice that not only was the patient removed,
so was her bed. The nurse scurries off in search
of one. She comes back empty-handed. Then she
adds insult to injury.
"Sorry
hon. We got another one ready to pop. I need your
wheelchair."
A
half an hour passes. I lay on the linoleum floor
feeling like I'm an untouchable giving birth in
Calcutta.
Finally
the door opens. Sandy, my midwife has arrived
with a bed. She helps me onto it. She looks in
the cabinet for linens and a pillow. She strikes
out. She summons the nurse, but of course none
are to be found. By now my teeth are chattering
. Rocky hurries in.
"I'm
freezing. Do something." I yell at him. He
throws my down coat over me while the midwife
examines me.
"You're
fully dilated. You can go ahead and push the baby
out now.."
I
bear down again and again. Still no baby. After
what seems like an eternity, Sandy says.
"I
want to give you some drugs to help you along."
I, who had wanted to have an underwater birth
with dim lights and Beethoven playing scream,
"Bring
them on."
She
squirts something into my nose .I feel like I've
swallowed a wave machine.. I push and push. Still
no baby. Sandy hooks me up to a fetal monitor.
"The heartbeat's slowing down. We've gotta
get this baby out."
Im
whisked to the delivery room. A needle is stuck
into my arm. Sandy picks up a scalpel. I give
one last push and hear a baby crying. I hear Sandy
yell,
"Get
a doctor stat."
I
wake up in the recovery room. Sandy smiles at
me and hands me a bundle in a blue blanket.
"It's
a boy."
"Oh
no. Years of little League and GI Joes."
I'd dreamed of little a girl who I'd dress in
frilly dresses and take to ballet lessons.. I
start to cry.
Sandy
tries to comfort me"His Apgar score was 9."
Rocky
says, "Everything's going to be ok, sweetie."
Sandy
picks up my arm and looks for a vein," You've
just lost a lot of blood. We're gonna need to
transfuse you"
"No,"
I moan, "I don't want any of your AIDS blood."
At that time there was no test to detect HIV.
Sandy
doesn't push it. She tells me that not only did
I have an almost nine pound baby, but he also
came out sucking his thumb. So his elbow was up
and ripped the birth canal to shreds as he went
through it.
"It's
the worst tearing I've ever seen in all my years
of midwifing."Sandy declares. She sits me
up and puts the baby to my breast. He starts to
suck, but nothing comes out.
He
screams. Sandy takes him.
"Sometimes
it takes a while to get things going. I'll get
him a bottle." She takes him from me and
she and Rocky disappear.
I
collapse on the bed feeling like I died ten years
ago. The entire lower half of my body is one big
throbbing cramp, sweat pours off of me, my hair
is so tangled and matted I'll probably have shave
my head if I live through this .
Suddenly
the door is flung open and a large black woman
enters with a handful of papers. She marches over
to me until she gets about an inch from my nose.
"Hello,
mommy. You fill out your menu ?"
"I'm
not hungry."
"You
will be soon with dat baby sucking on you. Now
fill it out." She shoves the paper at me.
I
roll over so my back is to her. "I don't
have a pencil."
She
comes around the bed and gets up in my face, "What,
no pencil. I can't wait for you to hunt one up.
I'm on a schedule. I need dat menu now, mommy"
I summon up the last modicum of strength I can
muster and raise myself up on my elbows. I look
her straight in the eye.
"You
can take your menu and shove it up your ass."
She gasps and hisses, "You see what you get
for dinner now." With that she's gone.
I'm
wheeled to my room right after that. My roommates
are a black woman and a Hasidic Jewish woman.
Soon I notice a smell that reminds me of some
spoiled meat I bought from Daitch Shopwell. I
grab a nurse as she comes in to bring medication.
"Is
the toilet backed up.?"
"No
that's Mrs.Steinberg" she whispers."
She gave birth on a Jewish holiday. She's not
allowed to wash for three days."
I
put the pillow over my head and drift off to sleep.
I'm awakened a short time later to a nurse shouting
"Baby
coming, baby coming." She turns the lights
on and off to alert us to this blessed event.
The babies are doled out to their respective mothers.
I hold the baby to my breast . A trickle of clear
liquid starts to flow. Then it stops. The baby
wails. So do I.
"Take
him away. I can't stand this " I sob.
The
nurse gives me a look and reaches for the baby.
My roommates stare at me. I bury my head in the
pillow and cry my eyes out.
A
few minutes later, someone taps me on the shoulder.
I look up and see three men in suits peering down
at me.
The
one in glasses with an inky comb-over does the
talking,
"I'm
Dr. Johnson. This is Dr. Foster and Dr. Cohen.
How are you feeling?"
"I'm
ok." I lie.
"We're
on the psychiatric staff here, and we've heard
you've been distraught."
"Not
really, just tired."
"Any
thoughts of suicide?" asks the one looks
like Tom Selleck except for his lazy eye.
"No."
They
exchange glances. Then the old one with crumbs
on his goatee leans in close,
"Do
you want to kill your baby?"
I
stare back at him. If I give the wrong answer
I know I could land in a padded cell in a straitjacket.
I give him a big smile,
"Of
course not. I love my baby. I'm so happy to be
a mother. I just had a rough delivery."
The
suits go out into the hall for a conference. Then
Dr. Comb-over comes back into the room.
"I'm
going to give this prescription to the nurse.
It should help. Don't hesitate to call if you
need anything." He hands me his card . "Oh
and congratulations." He leaves.
I
collapse back onto my bed and flick on my TV.
Somehow RYAN'S HOPE cheers me up. Seeing Seneca
fighting for her life in intensive care after
being left for dead by a gang of international
jewel thieves puts my problems in perspective.
Maybe my life isn't that bleak. I start to get
up to go to the bathroom. Pain shoots through
my abdomen. Blood soaks my nightgown. I ring for
the nurse. No response. I continue to ring for
the next ten minutes and no nurse appears. I haul
myself out of bed and drop into a nearby wheelchair
and wheel myself to the nurse's station. There
I find four or five nurses who are also immersed
in Seneca's problems.
"She
deserved it because she shook her ass at Jack
when Raoul went in for brain surgery," says
one who looks like Cesar Romero in drag.
One
with a needle nose and a mouth like a mail slot
declares,
"Yeah
but Raoul wouldn'ta needed brain surgery if he
hadn't started that riot in prison." Then
she empties five packets of sugar and several
heaping teaspoons of Cremora into her coffee.
"Excuse
me," I wheel myself into the middle of this
little kaffeeklatsch, "I need a nurse."
They scowl at me. Then they go right back to their
discussion.
I
tap needle nose on the shoulder, "Look. I
need help in getting to the bathroom."
She
looks at me like Clint Eastwood when he's trying
to figure out if someone is about to double cross
him, then she hisses,
"Did
you have a Caesarian?"
"No"
I apologize, staring at her mouth searching for
lips.
"Well
then I don't have to help you." She turns
up the television and puts up her feet and starts
to untie her ground grippers.
"These
shoes are pressin' on my bunions somethin' terrible."
I
wheel myself back to my room. Soon Rocky arrives
and helps me to the bathroom. A few minutes later
a large bouquet is delivered from his boss. The
card reads:
"Congratulations!
You did it right the first time."
I
tear it into little bitty pieces and fling them
on the floor. I'm giving Rocky an earful about
his sexist, chauvinistic boss when in marches
my dietician friend from the delivery room with
a cart loaded down with meals. First she approaches
the black woman,
"Hey
girlfriend, I seen dat boy of yours down dere
in dat nursery. He got himself a fine seta lungs."
She places a tray in front of her patient and
lifts off the silver top to reveal meatloaf, mashed
potatoes, green beans and a big hunk of chocolate
cake. Next she delivers a plate dinner to my Hasidic
roommate, reassuring her "Don't worry missus,
dat's chicken's Jewish ."
Then
it's my turn. Without even looking at me, she
slams a tray on my table. I lift the lid. It contains
a handful of dried-out peas, a dish of prunes
and a piece of meat that looks like one of those
freeze dried foods served in outer space. I send
Rocky out for Chinese food.
For
the next twenty four hours, every time I drift
off to sleep, the nurses burst into the room,
flick the fluorescent lights on and off and shout,
"Baby
coming, baby coming.'
I
complain to the attending physician about the
nurses, but he says there's nothing he can do,
they're in the union.
Finally
my milk flows and my son nearly chews my nipples
off trying to get it. By the time I am discharged,
there's not much left of me.
When
I get back to my apartment , my mother is waiting
for me. As soon as Rocky helps me into bed, she
is upon me peppering me with her theories on child
raising. Her generation invented baby bottles
and she considers breast-feeding to be downright
barbaric. Every time, the baby cries, she runs
in. "Why don't you give him a bottle."
I hobble to the bathroom to get away from her
carping. I sit on the toilet and wait, no urine
comes out. Suddenly I see stars. I fall off the
toilet. My mother rushes in.
"Oh
my God, you're probably having a hemorrhage."
I look up groggily from the bathroom floor.
"Call
the midwife." She runs out and is back in
a nanosecond.
"That
Sandy woman says to come to the emergency room."
I
try to wobble to my feet, but the room's still
spinning. I clutch a riser.
I
hear the baby screaming.
My
mother grabs him and runs out the door, "Wait
here, I'll be back."
A
few minutes later she re-appears with a strapping
young black man.
"This
cab driver will carry you to his taxi." She
slips five dollars in his pocket.
"Roosevelt
Hospital, son. And step on it."
Soon
I'm back in the hospital on a regular floor fighting
off a urinary infection. My roommate is an elderly
woman who informs me that she just had a colostomy
because she had such bad bowels that they burst
right through her abdomen. Even though I have
to endure her tortured moans and groans, it still
seems more peaceful than my apartment. Rocky buys
a breast pump and I send milk home to the baby.
But with my mother running the show, I wonder
if he ever drinks it.
Finally,
after a week I am released from the hospital.
I get home and pick up the baby and give him a
kiss. Maternal feelings well up.
"Did
you miss your mommy?"I start to nurse him.
When he gets his belly full, I put him down. He
immediately screams. My mother bustles in , bottle
in hand.
"He's
still hungry. There was a baby on the news whose
mother didn't have enough milk, and now he's a
Mongolian idiot."
She
shoves a bottle into his mouth. He sucks it down.
"There now , you see."
I
don't leave the house for several weeks. Some
days I don't get out of my nightgown or brush
my teeth. Even though I'm eating liver and roast
beef, I'm still anemic. I can't go to the store
for groceries. The thought of climbing four flights
seems more daunting than scaling Mt. Everest.
My friend suggests that I need an aura cleansing.
Rocky
helps me get downstairs and drives me to the house
of this woman named Sahara who promises that once
she's scrubbed my aura down, I'll be a virtual
white tornado of energy. She makes me stand in
the center of the room while she waves crystals
in front of me and chants some kind of gibberish
"Ommmm
.Huuuuuu
Ommmm!"
After
several minutes of incantations, my legs start
to buckle.
"Can
I sit down?"
"Just
hold on a few more minutes and you'll feel the
energy transforming."
Sahara
burns some incense and lights a votive candle
to suck up my discarded negative sanskaras.
I
lean against the back of her zebra-striped couch
till I'm finally spic and span. Then, I collapse
on it with my head in my hands.
"You
feel the chi pulsing through you?" she asks.
"I'm
not sure." I put on my pea coat.
"You
will. That'll be $75."
I
pay up and stumble out to the car where Rocky's
waiting for me.
We
drive up Third Avenue. I check my chakras to see
if that surge of energy has hit. By the time we
get to 59th Street, I think I feel something.
"Pull over," I tell Rocky, "I want
to go into Bloomingdales and get some thank you
cards for our baby gifts."
"Are
you sure you're up to it?"
"I've
got a power surge."
I
get out of the car. I walk to the stationary department
and find some cards with no problem. As I walk
toward the cashier I feel a bounce in my step.
Then I notice a long line. Now that I am no longer
pregnant, I'll have to wait it out. But that's
ok, I can take it now that all those negative
sanskaras have been nuked. The line inches forward.
After what seems like an eternity I'm one person
away from the cashier. Then I hear a child screaming.
I take a tiny step toward the little wailer. I
want to see how the mother handles this. I need
all the child-rearing strategies I can get. When
I turn back, a woman in a full-length mink has
edged her way in front of me.
"Excuse,
me . But I'm next."
"No.
You left." Mrs. Mink coat looks down on me
like I'm bringing shame on Bloomingdales by appearing
there in a pea coat.
"I
didn't leave. I just looked away for a minute."
"Well.
You lost your place.."
"You
are not next."
"Yes
I am." She starts to put a stack of greeting
cards down in front of the clerk.
Suddenly,
I know I've gotten my money's worth from that
aura cleansing. A rush of adrenaline courses through
me. I start to wave my arms like King Kong . I
get up in Mrs. Mink Coat's face and roar. "GRRRR!"
She
backs away. I chase her , baring my teeth, swinging
my arms at her and making noises like the gorilla
at the Bronx Zoo when he wants someone to feed
him a banana. Mrs. Mink Coat beats a hasty retreat
out of the stationary department. I return to
the sales desk. The crowd parts for me. They let
me go to the head of the line. I pay for my things
and leave.
When
I get home, I tell my mother I don't need her
help any more and she can go home. I nurse the
baby and he falls off to sleep. Then I write out
all my thank you notes in one sitting. "Your
gift is lovely, and we're enjoying the baby so
much." I gush. And somehow, I actually mean
it.
email
us with your comments.
|