"La
la love plus one." - Haircut 100
I had a little possum on a Saturday night, and this is how his story goes…
I had a little possum on a Saturday night, and this is how his story goes…
My
Birth Story – 26 March, 2011 – 9:24 p.m.
I
was running late for work, but then I’m always late – or running. It was a
beautiful afternoon, so my trusty fruit and vegetable cart man was out. I bought
three bananas, two oranges, and a bag of baby carrots. Then, I ran to get my
coffee. “What kind of donut would your baby like?” asked Elda, my sweetheart of
a coffee-lady. “What?” I didn’t hear; she has a lovely, but thick accent. “Your
baby. I want to give you a donut today because you are so nice, always nice
customer to us.” That made me glow. Not the offer of a donut, but her constant
kindness for as long as I’ve been going there. Sometimes she’s the last cheerful
person I see on a Saturday, because Saturdays at The Mex are the most difficult
night. “The pink one,” I answered. Yes, donut, sugar. Sugar and fruit, my two
favorite food groups!
Back when I was a rockstar Mex waitress! |
However,
that isn’t how my day had begun…
Earlier
that morning I’d had a dream that I was about to go…as in, wet myself. I jumped
out of bed and ran to the bathroom as fast as I could! Grr. That Tristan! He’d
been sitting on my bladder since day one; he must have shifted onto it even
further. I felt insecure about my new problem with incontinence, but I’d read
that was normal so I wasn’t very surprised. I got ready for work just as I would
any other Saturday. Servers are never allowed to call out sick – not even when
they are pregnant and/or incontinent.
Once
I clocked in I cleaned until I got my first table. I carried out tall stacks of
side plates, filled the napkin bin, and wiped the counters. I visited with my
friends and coworkers while I ate my sesame bagel with cream cheese, and sipped
at my cinnamon iced coffee. The coffee-people knew my order by heart. I sipped
the coffee slowly unsure if I’d be able to run to the bathroom in time; it felt
like I needed to go every few minutes. Pretty soon my section was full and I
didn’t have time to think about my situation other than feeling awkward about
it. I was bouncing from table to table, table to bar, table to kitchen. Each
week I grew significantly larger but I was determined to waitress every Saturday
night for as long into my pregnancy as I could. I was 30 weeks and 6 days; two
more months to go!
Taken after one of my 12 hour shifts - I planned to work up until the last minute! That's one plan I could keep. |
Whenever
I had a moment while waiting for my drinks at the bar, I would lean over and let
my baby-belly hang down. Gravity helped. Tristan had sat very low my entire
pregnancy and it put tremendous pressure on my lower back. I had hoped to be one
of those women whose endometriosis and ovarian cysts had been magically cured by
pregnancy, but after a few pain-free months I discovered that wouldn’t be the
case. They were monitoring two large cysts and I was under strict orders to come
into the ER if the pain became unbearable because my ovary could flip with the
growing baby.
How
does one measure pain? I’m unsure. I have experienced pain nearly every day for
two years. It ranges from subtle to so strong I need to grip something tightly
to keep from collapsing. I hide behind a face that reveals nothing. How would I
describe it, though? I know that it hurts, but I’m certain others experience
pain far worse than mine. The first time I thought my appendix had burst, and
it’s been said to be more painful than contractions and child birth.
My
lower back was already aching and I found myself easily annoyed with customers.
I wondered how many more Saturdays I could do this…I counted how many I had left
and it didn’t sound hard. “I’ll just go as long as I can,” I coaxed
myself.
Pretty
soon it wasn’t just my back. There was pressure on my tailbone. “Something isn’t
right,” I told my manager. “I’m not sure if I can finish.” “That’s fine, just
let me know.” I took food out to a table and got more refills, printed out a
check. The pressure was growing. “Something’s wrong. I can’t finish.” I went
into the back office to sort myself out. It was busy and I would be giving up a
large amount of money if I didn’t finish my shift. I tried to sit down, but I
couldn’t. Instead I kneeled over the back of a chair.
My
mind was swimming. Something wasn’t right, but what was wrong? I thought I’d
call my OB’s answering service. Meanwhile Brandon showed up to start his shift
at 7 o’clock. He came to find me. “What’s wrong, baby?” “My tailbone hurts.” Too
literal. “Maybe you should go home and rest.” “No…I think I need an ambulance.”
“Really??” The idea of sitting in a cab – or sitting at all – seemed impossible.
“Will you get my things, please?”
911
“What’s
your emergency?”
“I’m
pregnant. I’m 30 weeks. Something doesn’t feel right. I think I need to go to
the hospital.”
The
dispatcher put me on the phone with someone who asked me more questions. Brandon
held me up and helped me into the alley behind the restaurant where I wanted to
wait. I was so embarrassed over calling an ambulance that I didn’t want to
parade past my former-diners as they sipped their margaritas. We heard the
siren, but nobody came. Several minutes went by and then a medic found me on
foot.
Together
she and Brandon helped get me to the ambulance.
“Can you tell me what you’re feeling? Do they
feel like contractions?”
Was
she mad, I wondered? I wasn’t due until 29 May, 2011, and I’d certainly know if
I were having contractions! More pain, more discomfort. The medics were nice and
light-hearted. They said some things that made me smile, but my heart was
starting to beat harder.
Contractions…is
that what I was feeling, and if so, now what? What would happen?
I
was put into a wheelchair. I had chosen to sit in the ambulance, but it was so
uncomfortable. They were rolling me along as waves of discomfort took over my
body; more pressure. People talking to me, signing papers. Now we were rushing,
the wheelchair going faster. They told Brandon to wait and then I was through
doors and into another room. Talking, telling me to undress, asking when my
water broke? I said, no, no, I don’t know, I thought he was laying on my
bladder. The nurse helped me get my pants off and…splash. Oh, I was so
humiliated. Now it was obvious. “Yes, that’s your water. Lie down.” They checked
me. “Six centimeters.” What? My heart was really racing now. Next room. “Now
she’s fully.” People were rushing everywhere and I kept hearing “plus one, plus
two, plus…” I was in shock.
And
why couldn’t I put my head down? I’d be able to think better if I was
comfortable. I reached up to discover a large black flower I’d put in my hair
before work. My nails were the color of a rock band and my make-up was done
enough to last and last. “Did you get ready before coming here?” my attendant
asked in a hesitant voice. “No…work, I was working…”
They
tried to put a needle in my arm to hook up an IV, but my veins are hard to find.
She missed. She tried again on the other arm. Blood shot everywhere. “I’m a
mess…” I remember murmuring. The contractions wouldn’t let me think straight.
Someone told me they were going to put the baby’s heart on a monitor. They
couldn’t find it for what felt like eternity. Finally! Thump, thump…along came a
contraction, then, thump……………thump……………the heart rate slowed and nearly
disappeared. It sounded like my body was killing the baby! This couldn’t be
real, but a woman came down to my eye level and said, “I need you to understand
something. You’re going to have your baby now – there’s nothing we can do to
stop this, do you understand? We’re going to take you into the OR so you’ll be
closer to where your baby needs to go – there won’t be time for you to see him.
They need to take him right away.” I nodded. “Someone get dad.”
Brandon
appeared, and put on scrubs. “Dad, you can be in the room…” mumble, mumble. My
bed was rolling to the OR. “Call my dad?” I asked Brandon. I realized nobody
knew what was happening to me. I was scared. I wanted to e-mail my mom like
every other night. I still couldn’t believe this was happening. I had two more
months, and after a difficult first trimester I loved every minute of being
pregnant.
“Do
you know what you’re having?” They were trying to distract me. “Boy…” People
everywhere, bright lights over me, Brandon in position behind me, so many
people. I couldn’t see Brandon. Instructions given to me. There was a clock on
the wall behind all the people. It was only 9 o’clock. They helped me slide to
the edge of the table…a sheet was placed under me, a bucket on the floor. It was
happening the same way I’d seen it when I was in the room for Julie’s labor and
delivery.
“We
need to get this baby out quickly.”
With
each contraction Tristan’s heartbeat slowed and then I’d wait for it to start
again. Terror had enveloped me. The best thing I could think to do was breathe
and get through it. Breathe…it was a little after 9 now. Each contraction I
pushed three times. The young girl who introduced herself as my nurse leaned
over and told me not to push with my face. I was scared, though. If I didn’t
push with my face, then I’d push with my body and he wasn’t ready
yet.
I
listened as his tiny heartbeat faded away…
Panic!
Breathe.
“I’m about to have another one.”
“I’m about to have another one.”
“Great,
use it!”
I
pushed so hard! Past three times, over and over telling myself his life depended
on it…because it did. Nothing would change what was happening and if I got him
out faster he’d have a better chance. Right? Push, push, I saw the clock ticking
behind everyone. Brandon’s voice encouraged me. “You’re doing such a good job,
honey.” He must be scared, too, I thought.
One
final push 24 minutes past 9 o’clock and out our baby came. He just slid out. He
felt long. Commotion down there and then he was off – surrounded by his medical
team, body straight, back arched, long – so long. He looked like he was crowd
surfing through a Pearl Jam video. He was alive. He left the room just as the
tiniest voice I’ve ever heard let out a thin wail. Then the doors shut and I was
left alone with those who had stayed behind for my afterbirth.
It
took a long time to fix me up. Longer than it took to have Tristan.
They
told Brandon he could come have a look at his son. I was being sewn up. I
wondered what he would see.
He
returned with a picture on his cell phone. “Here he is!” I looked. “I can’t see
his face.”
I
was overcome by waves of shock. Time went by slower than ever.
God
couldn’t have kept Tristan safe through the fire, through losing the kittens,
through our wedding, and the sad but fun days of staying on the Berzinsky’s
living room floor – only to take him away from me – could he? Why? Whatever
comes, it is His will, I thought. Throughout the aftermath of the fire I had
been humbled over and over again. I sent God one hundred prayers. “Please keep him safe.”
I
was rolled back to the normal delivery room. Philadelphia’s skyline lit up the
window. I was rolled into the maternity ward and given a single room, tucked
away from the noise of new mothers with “well babies”. Ours was unwell. Time
passed and then they told us we could go see him. It was after midnight. I
wanted to run to him. I was afraid. I was overjoyed and nervous to meet the
tiny, but long human who’d come out of me. What would he look like? I’d dreamed
of him so many times but hadn’t even seen his face in my dreams. Through a
locked door. Directions. Please Wash Your Hands For Two Minutes, the sign said.
We did, turning the water on and off with our knee. Around the corner.
There.
There.
There
in an incubator with a spotlight on him was our son.
Tristan.
He
was facing away from us.
Held
my breath. Walked closer.
Then
I looked upon his face, and he was beautiful! “He’s so teeny,” I said, then
remembered my own mother had called me teeny while she was pregnant. He weighed
3 pounds, 11 ounces and was 17.5 inches long. Every feature was perfect, but so
teeny-tiny and there were so many cords attached to him. A mask kept me from
seeing much of his face.
Hello, Tristan...would it be all right if I held your hand right now? |
“You
can touch him,” the nurse told me.
“What?
We can?”
“Sure,”
she smiled.
We
opened the doors to his incubator and reached in. His skin was warm, soft, and
delicate. His fingers closed around ours. The three of us held onto each other;
my teeny family. Then Brandon said a prayer for all of us.
...so that's almost what you look like. There's still so much covering your face. |
I
didn’t expect this to be our story. I’m a creature of habit and routine, but I’m
learning to expect the unexpected.
Tomorrow
Tristan will be four weeks old. His gestational age will be 34 weeks and 6
days.
Tomorrow
I will gaze upon Tristan and see his face with nothing attached to it for the
first time in his life.
"Wait!" I said to the nurse. "I've never seen his whole face before! Please, may I take a picture?" |
We were on the apnea monitor for four months after discharge - we celebrated the day we got the news. NO MORE BRADYS! Goodbye, monitor. |
Big boy. He's now 7.5 months and learning how to eat solids the BLW way! |
He's come so far. I'm so amazed that he's doing so much so early! Even Patrick who was term at 37 weeks 2 days took much longer to do what Tristan has been doing for a month! He's such a rockstar!!
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