Katie had a baby. She is my first really good, long-time
friend to be pregnant and deliver. Sure I have friends who have had babies –
one friend and two family members were pregnant and delivered but I was not
around for either big bellies or the births; a few friends I met while they
were pregnant – but it’s different when the pregnant lady is my best friend of
more than a decade and she is my age.
And now, on day two, I am completely in love with the idea. Paul is toast. In all fairness, I did warn him days ago after his first flight on his long journey back to PNG. “Once I hold him, you’re done,” I said. “Yeah. I know,” he replied.
Having a pregnant friend makes my mind wander. I have a
million questions, most of them admittedly stupid, and, thankfully, Katie
answers every one, most of the time laughing.
The birth process was different than I had expected. Katie
did not deliver the old-fashioned way, so her mom and I sat in the waiting room
until well after the surgery. I was expecting more people to be around, and I
was expecting to be able to see her sooner than we did. Instead, Katie’s mom
and I kept each other company and watched a couple episodes of Downton Abbey until she received the
invitation to head upstairs.
Yesterday I felt in the way and a bit awkward because though
I am nearly family, I am not family, so part of me wondered if I really should
have been there. Katie’s husband later told me that subtlety is not his strong point so
if he didn’t say, “Get out,” I should just assume I was in the clear. “Why do
you keep asking if it’s OK?” he inquired last night. “Because I was instructed
to do so,” I responded, “just in case my visit comes at an inconvenient moment.” "Just come in."
Katie was amazing. People around me leading up to my wedding
told me that I was the calmest bride they had ever seen. When my wedding
planner was hours late and had not yet shown up with the flowers 10 minutes
prior to go time, I looked at my bridesmaids and said, “If she’s not here in
five minutes, I will just walk down the aisle without flowers.” She showed up
in five minutes but that’s another story.
If I was calm then, Katie was completely placid in the hours
leading up to her delivery. At her house 6.5 hours before she was to head to
the hospital, she was eating a giant mug filled with organic mac and cheese,
giving me a hug and thinking about sleeping like it was any other Saturday
night. But it wasn’t a Saturday night. It was Tuesday night and she was
supposed to be having a baby in the morning.
I sat on the couch, Van to my left on his phone, Katie to my
right on her phone and Katie’s mom in a chair on her own phone. “Am I really
the only one who is incredibly excited right now?!” I exclaimed. They all
looked at me like I was a bit delusional. Apparently I was.
A few hours after the delivery, I got to see little Colton and
Katie, just as calm as the evening before, suggested I hold him. I was pretty much terrified. He was the first
newborn I may have encountered since my own brother’s birth 29 years ago. I was
2. I don’t think I was trusted to hold him at that time. Why was I trusted now?
I was nervous but Katie and her mom insisted that I would be
fine. And I was. Longer than we all expected, Colton’s skinny body measured
more than 20 inches (more than 51 cm). I looked at him, sleeping and snorting, not yet keen on
opening his eyes, and I just sat there and thought about the wonder behind what
had just happened. “It’s so weird to think that he didn’t exist four hours ago,”
I said.
All three of them immediately bantered: “He existed!”
“Well, I know he existed,
but he wasn’t here – out here.”
Amazing.
Then my brain went on a roller coaster ride, trying to
figure out whether or not I wanted to go through this whole process. To be
completely honest, sometimes I want a kid and sometimes I just don’t, for a
million different reasons.
In the waiting area I saw kids running around and not
listening to their parents. No, I’m good, I thought. Later a couple came
through the doors. The wife bolted through the crowd and pushed through an
older couple, wincing and holding her back with one hand. She was clearly in
labor. Her husband casually stood in line, three people deep, as the line
continued to form behind him. He stood there, patiently, with a smile on his
face as he chatted with another person.
“Do you want to go ahead?” a gentleman asked. “No,” the
husband responded. “It’s O.K.”
Cut to the wife on the couch breathing through the pain.
Katie’s mom and I kept looking over at her, offering support and trying to get
someone’s attention. We even looked over at the husband and tried to insist
that he move to the front of the line.
“Uh,” the gentleman murmured. “I
think you’d better go ahead.”
At that the husband casually moved to the
desk and quietly inquired about the delivery area. The wife yelled from the
couch, “I called ahead!” The next thing we knew, she was on her way to the
desk, answering all the questions as she used the counter to support her while
she bent over during a contraction.
Poor girl, I thought to myself. A
few minutes later, she and her husband were directed to the delivery area. As I
watched her turn the corner, bracing for another contraction, I felt something
inside me perk up and say, “I want to be her.”
WHAT!? Where did that
come from?!
I sent Paul a message. “Being
here is not healthy.”
He laughed. At least he typed a
little “lol.”
Being with Katie and her family
in the recovery room, my mind went back and forth. I became anxious thinking
about them going home in a couple days to an empty house where only the four of
them will be. And then they are stuck with this kid for the rest of his life.
But then I think about his actual
birth and what that must have been like for Katie and Van to witness, and how
this little person is a product of the two of them, a new life. And then I want
one.
And then I think about how much
money a child costs and how much more stuff needs to go with the kid and then
how life has now changed for them. And then I might not want one.
And now, on day two, I am completely in love with the idea. Paul is toast. In all fairness, I did warn him days ago after his first flight on his long journey back to PNG. “Once I hold him, you’re done,” I said. “Yeah. I know,” he replied.
1 comment:
What a wonderful memory to have! What will your future hold? Can't wait to see. Keep me posted.
Mommy Vickie
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