Category Archives: Family

There is no “STOP”

There is no “STOP”

ready set push29 years ago from right now, I was getting a little frantic.  I’d been admitted to the hospital at Scott Air Force Base the day before to deliver my first child, more than 2 weeks past the due date.  Woo hoo!  Tiime to make the donuts!  Get this show on the road!  Git ‘er done!

Yet here I was, 30 hours later, in horrible pain, and no baby.  Not even close.  My mother-in-law, bless her freakin’ heart, just kept feeding me ice chips and telling me not to worry.  Mouth saying one thing, eyes saying another.  What she really meant was that she was worried enough for both of us.

I had prepared for this whole labor & delivery thing.  Read the books, practiced the breathing, packed the bags.  I first realized it wasn’t going to go as planned when my sister had to tell me that I was in labor, because I hadn’t figured it out.  To be fair, she IS a medical professional, and this WAS my first pregnancy, but it’s a little embarrassing  when someone ELSE has to tell you “it’s time”.

Since my husband was stationed at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, MS, my mother and mother-in-law whisked me away to the hospital. I was robed, and needled, and poked, and measured, and monitored, and advised to try napping while I could, because soon I’d have a crying infant waking me up every few hours.

No baby came.  The doctor broke my water, and the contractions got stronger and closer together, but no baby came.  The med student that tried to administer a “saddle block” for pain did so incorrectly, so no relief from what was now more than 24 hours of back labor.

At Scott Air Force Base in 1982, there were several women to one labor room.  No exaggeration:  there were women who came in after me, had their babies, and were being DISCHARGED TO GO HOME, and I was still in the labor process.  The pain got worse, and I was moved into a private labor room because I was making the other laboring women nervous.  I was paler than I normally am, which means I looked like an albino, and my lips were chapped and bleeding from being so dry.  There had not been a damn thing in the book about this.

The night wore on, with different doctors and nurses making their rounds every so often, checking the chart and repeating the by now ridiculous advice to try to nap and remember to breathe through the contractions.  I was beginning to become sarcastic and surly. (I know, I know, you can’t imagine that, but it’s true.)  The contractions were constant, and spiking off the paper feeding through the machine.  The oh-so-practical military nurse decided to just turn off the monitor, since it was established that I was, indeed, having strong contractions.  Oh goody.

Morning came, and I was in a full blown panic.  I was thinking of suing the author of the book for total misrepresentation of this birthing process.  My mother had been in the waiting room since Friday afternoon when I was admitted, but wouldn’t come into the labor room because she was “too upset to see me”.  Thanks, Mom!  My mother-in-law, however, was a champ.  She just kept talking, telling stories, making jokes, and reassuring me that as soon as I saw the baby, I’d forget that I’d ever been in labor.  My mother-in-law is a liar.

We were past the 48 hour mark, groups of doctors were now stopping by, along with groups of medical students who were being quizzed on what could possibly be wrong.  I was suddenly an example of something, some birthing malfunction, but I didn’t know what.

I had become pretty delirious.  I remember looking at my m-i-l, and telling her with complete seriousness that I’d changed my mind.  I couldn’t stand this anymore, I couldn’t do it, I just wanted it to stop. I was taking it all back:  I didn’t want to have a baby anymore.  The whole baby idea was a big mistake.  Just make it stop.  Please.  I needed someone to make it stop.  For the first time, my mother in law didn’t try to blow smoke up my hospital gown or distract me with something witty.  With as serious a look as I’d ever seen from her, she told me that there was no “STOP”; yes, something was wrong, something was VERY wrong, but I was a going to have to see it through and deal with whatever the outcome was.  She left the room, and soon she came back with a new doctor.  He happened to be the Chief of Surgery, and was humoring my mother in law who he’d seen ranting at the nurse’s station that someone needed to do something NOW before her daughter in law died.

He looked at the chart, which was now pages long, and would glance up at me as he flipped one page to the next.  I’m pretty sure that if you had a picture of Linda Blair in the Exorcist next to a picture of me at that moment, there would have been lots of similarities.

Without any further ado, he announced that I needed a C-section; within a minute there were people everywhere, unplugging and needling and poking and yelling instructions.  I was given a general anesthesia, and within 20 minutes, that long-overdue baby made her entrance.  They even X-rayed my mother-in-law’s hand after they had taken me into surgery to see if the bones had survived the 48 hours of “just squeeze my hand, honey”.

I woke up a couple of hours later, and finally got to see my first born.  She was still kind of blue, and had a serious cone head, but she was alive and healthy.

Happy birthday, Miss Amanda.  While I’ve never forgotten the pain of those 3 days, you’ve always been worth every moment of it.

Memories From Dysfunction Junction

Memories From Dysfunction Junction
Memories From Dysfunction Junction

This morning was the monthly meeting of the Book Club I recently joined.  I genuinely look forward to Book Club Saturdays, for a couple of reasons:

1.  I get some sort of junk food for breakfast.  We meet at either a local pastry shop or McDonald’s.  Unhealthy yumminess!

2.  I love having people to talk to about books.  At one point in my life, I was surrounded by book readers, but that has faded away, and to be reintroduced to book readers makes me a happy camper.

Back to today’s Book Club.  We’d read “A Wolf At the Table” by Augusten Burroughs.  I love Augusten Burroughs, and have since about the second page of “Running With Scissors”.  He finds humor in darkness, he’s damaged, he’s realistic.  He’s a survivor.  Mostly, though, I love him because I can relate to so many of the emotions and quirks that he so openly exposes, because I, too, was raised in an abundance of weirdness.  My mother was pretty much a nut case.

Now, let me clarify:  I never spent a night curled in a closet, afraid for my life.  I never went to school covered with bruises.  My mother never (seriously) threatened to kill me.  She was only 5 ft. tall, and probably only topped 100 lbs. when she was 9 months pregnant, so she wasn’t very intimidating physically.  She was more like a psychological / emotional destruct-o-saur.  Decades later, my siblings and I still tell “Mary Juanita” stories at family get togethers, and our own children look at us incredulously.  I’m sure they wonder if we’re making this stuff up….and wonder why we’re laughing our butts off.  We laugh because we can.

In honor of the millions of adults who were, as children, surrounded by weirdness (I truly believe there must be millions), I’d like to give you a tiny glimpse of life in Mary Juanita Land.

When my mother was young, she was an exceptionally beautiful woman.  The years were not kind to her, thanks to lots of cigarettes and even more bourbon, but she had been graced with a lovely face.  I think that she spent much of her life torturing herself with “what ifs”, meaning, she fantasized that if she hadn’t gotten married and had a covey of children, she might have gone on to a glamorous existence.  Or maybe not.  Who knows.  Anyway, the point is, she LOVED watching the Miss America pageant.  She’d pick her favorites, and predict who would make the cut to the next round.  She was quite good at anticipating what the judges would appreciate, because she was normally right on the money with her selections.

And she would cry.  Cry?  Yes, she would cry.  Why would Miss America make a grown woman cry, you ask?  Because Mary Juanita couldn’t understand why God gave her ugly daughters.  She had prayed for pretty daughters, but apparently God didn’t find her worthy. She talked about how proud the mothers of the contestants must be, a pride she apparently would never know.

Every year.

Do you want to know what the WEIRDEST part of this story is?  Her daughters continued to watch this pageant with her .  Every year. Then listen to her cry about her disappointment over our lack of acceptable beauty.  Why did we do this to ourselves?  We have no idea.  Do we laugh about this now?  Of course we do.

There are many, many Mary Juanita stories.  Some are darker than others.  Some are just plainly hysterical.  Someday I may write all of them down……the night she drunkenly mistook a sidewalk for the street and nearly killed a group of teenagers that were walking home…..the time I knocked her down a flight of stairs and thought I’d killed her……her decision to “go on strike” until her family appreciated her, and demonstrating her resolve by spray painting her demands on the living room wall…..the year she gave me, her 13 year old daughter, a black & red lace negligee for Christmas, complete with matching g-string…..

I learned volumes from my Mother.  How to cope, how to laugh…… and how important it was for my daughters to know they were beautiful.

I can see very well

There’s a boat on the reef with a broken back

And I can see it very well

There’s a joke and I know it very well

It’s one of those that I told you long ago

Take my word I’m a madman don’t you know ~Bernie Taupin

Mary Juanita

Legacy

Legacy

I have said many times that I’m most exceptional at being average.   I’m not artistic, brilliant, beautiful, athletic, comedic or creative.  I’d always wanted to be one of those people who were born to do something, who literally glowed with some God given talent.  Alas, it was not to be.

 

Over time, I realized that I wanted my legacy to be as a devoted wife, mother, and friend.  Divorce threw me off track for the devoted wife award, but I’m doing better with this marriage.  Never give up!  My children all went through points in their life when they loathed me, so I’ve never been overly confident that I was going to be a maternal legend either.  As for friends, well, I’m not what would be described as “social”, so it’s a relationship I have with only a small handful of people.  To top it off, I get busy and tend to not stay in touch with them for stretches of time.  To sum it up, I’m…..average on good days, and slightly below the rest of the time.

 

So it’s especially sweet when I get a reminder that despite my lack of super powers, I have raised three exceptional children.  I had one of those reminders this week, and it makes me swell up with pride that I had something to do with making these people who they are.

 

My oldest daughter has had a rough year, and that’s an understatement.  With 4 children in a single paycheck home, for years she’s had to pinch pennies and do without things that most consider necessities.  In July, her husband was in a devastating auto accident.  That left her with 4 children, huge medical bills (the other motorist was significantly under-insured), a wheelchair bound husband, a totaled car, and no paychecks.  Friends and family have tried to assist when possible, but there’s just no way to make it easy.

 

Last week, they were able to get a replacement vehicle with the insurance funds.  Thank heavens, that was one less thing to worry about.  I would have breathed a sigh of relief over having 2 cars again, but she didn’t.  After 6 months of being a one-car family, she realized they could do without a second vehicle.  Rather than sell it (because there’s still no paycheck, her husband is likely out of work for at least a few more months), she cleaned it up and gave it to someone in the family that didn’t have a vehicle.  This woman, who doesn’t have 2 nickels to rub together, gave away a perfectly functional, valuable vehicle. She did it happily, and without any expectation of anything in return.

 

It was a reminder to me that all 3 of my children are “that type”: generous, sometimes to a fault, thoughtful, and genuinely kind.  They do their good deeds quietly, anonymously when possible, without fanfare or notice.  They’re also sarcastic, in-your-face tough love givers, and occasionally knuckleheads.  The sarcastic knucklehead parts most definitely come from me.

 

I have witnessed my youngest daughter give someone else her last dollar, literally.  She has skipped meals to feed other people’s children.  She’s given away furniture, jewelry, clothes….pretty much anything she has, if someone else needs it, she jumps at the chance to provide it.  Children are drawn to her like she’s a female Santa Claus; she just connects with them and they love her.  She has spent the majority of her New Year’s Eves with a houseful of kids so that her friends can go out and celebrate.

 

My son, who works his second full time job (concurrently) as a server in a restaurant, has worked many shifts with no money to show for it.  However, on the nights that have been good to him, but not to someone else, he regularly slips some money to the person who had the cheap tables that night.  He pays for cabs for bar customers that have had one too many.  He picks up shifts for others when they have sick children at home, even if that means he’ll be working 15 days straight without a day off.  He is never too busy to help anyone who needs a ride home, help moving, or taking care of his Mom’s dogs when she’s away.  With all that, he still remembers to bring his wife flowers or surprise her with a night out whenever he can.

 

I’ve finally found the one thing that has made me exceptional:  I gave birth to three of the most incredible people I know.  Not such a shabby legacy after all.

My clan