Friday, December 4, 2015

Baby Buyer's Remorse

I’m a pretty lazy person. I love not doing stuff. If you’ve ever seen me doing something, it was almost certainly a mandatory something.
So a little bit ago I had a baby. The having of this baby was mandatory; he couldn’t stay in there.
When you have just birthed a baby – when, by whatever means, you’ve gotten a child who was formerly in you out of you – you feel like you’ve really done something. And you have, an extraordinary something. It was a big task, and you’ve completed that task, and you really, really feel like you’re done. But here’s the thing: you are not done. From now on, you will never, ever be done. 

So I gave birth to a human being. I held him close, astonished and enamored and relieved. I was almost done. The nurses took him, wiped him off, put antibiotics on his eyes. I gave birth to a placenta. I did not embrace the placenta, but I was even more relieved and even more done – labor complete. They would take my family and me to the recovery room, and we would go to bed, because it was bedtime, and I was done.

They took my family and me to the recovery room. The night nurse gave me a ten-minute lesson on how to pee with my broken parts and a five-minute lesson on how to keep a child alive until his eventual, inevitable acceptance into Harvard in 18ish years. Then we went to bed, because it was bedtime, and I was “done.”
Baby slept remarkably well that first night. We practiced nursing every 3-4 hours and tried to sleep the rest of the time. My brain woke me more than baby did.

In those couple of days in the hospital, we were overwhelmed and overtired, but overjoyed. The first day nurse scolded me for sleeping letting baby go 4 straight hours without nursing, so, racked with guilt, I squeezed colostrum onto my finger and shoved it repeatedly into baby’s little sleeping mouth, because he was swaddled tight and would not wake up to nurse. But that was the low point. I was scared and a little uneasy, but every couple of hours a nurse would come in and change baby's diaper, or swaddle him, or give him a bath, or compliment his latch on the breast, or say that he seemed like a really "chill" baby, or assure us that we weren't sadists for having him circumcised -- almost hourly, a professional would put us at ease. It was great. It was fine.

Then we brought our bundle home, and the baby's life and fate and healing penis became the responsibility of solely my husband and me. And we'd known this was going to happen -- we had heard of babies before, had even read books about them, had even met some in real life. But this was not some anecdotal newborn; this was an actual newborn, who flopped and stretched and cried and pooped and needed and needed and needed.
The baby slept 18 hours a day and still consumed every minute of our time. He'd inherited my laziness -- he constantly needed us to feed him, clothe him, unclothe him, wash him, clothe him again, rock him, hold him, love him. And we still had to manage to feed, wash, clothe, and love ourselves.

I feel intense anxiety when I don't know what I'm doing, and I had no idea what I was doing. All day, every day, I had no idea what I was doing.
I felt I had made a terrible mistake, one I couldn't take back. I would never be my old self again. Neither would I ever be a mother.
I fell apart. I cried on and off for a fortnight, taking breaks to keep my beloved, terrifying newborn alive. I poured my fears into Google, which returned only cold, clinical -- if informative -- responses. I bellowed into the phone at other mothers, actual mothers, hoping for reassurance that I wasn't a monster or an idiot. And the general consensus seemed to be: "This is normal. You're not a monster-idiot -- we all are. At first."

So I didn't think I had postpartum depression. I had no bad feelings for or about my darling baby, just my circumstance. And I got through the early hard times by giving in, by learning, and by making room for the necessary and tremendous parenting and partnership of my husband.

As the books and mothers had told me, it got easier. Much easier. Over weeks and months things started falling into place -- breastfeeding, sleep, comfort, familiarity. There was always something to learn -- parenting is all curveballs and I was always picked last for gym-class baseball -- but with each lesson, the learning came more naturally. I wasn't lazy anymore. I wasn't not-a-mother anymore. I felt better. The baby and I were thick as thieves. We weren't done. We never would be. We were just starting.


It got harder, too. When baby forgot how to sleep on his own, he slept up against me. I didn't fully sleep for months. I had remained anxious and scattered and sometimes-sad. And then it was harder. We sleep trained at nine months. I don't really want to talk about it. Nothing bad happened. It was one of the worst weeks of my life.
It was then -- more than nine months after my life changed, that I realized I had postpartum depression. It was constant, but there were also troughs -- when I was especially sleep deprived, when I felt lost, when my hormones fluctuated.

Books hadn't prepared me to care for a baby, and brochures hadn't prepared me for postpartum depression. With a bulleted list on a slick trifold paper for a diagnostic tool, you'd swear I just had "baby blues": a milder, cuter, more alliterative condition than postpartum depression, the existence of which enables new moms everywhere to dismiss their own anguish as normal.
Five days into motherhood, at my son's first appointment at his pediatrician's office, a lactation consultant asked how I was. My eyes filled with tears. I'm terrified to be out of the house. And I'm terrified when I'm at home. And I feel tremendous guilt for feeling so terrified. But, since you ask, "I'm fine, thanks. It's just hard sometimes." She looked at me, with genuine compassion, and said, "That's to be expected. Just please tell me or your doctor if it gets too hard." She couldn't read my mind; I couldn't read my own mind.

My son is 18 months old today -- a giant -- and I still wouldn't say my depression has been managed. But I'm not done.
It helps that my baby, my family is the best thing in my life. It helps that I've gained confidence in the mother in me. It helps that I looked at myself, that I talked, that I listened. It helps that I have this blog in which to share my story void to scream into.
I still get sad for no reason. I lose focus from time to time. I mourn the parts of me that have gone dormant. However, the uncertainty is gone. The decision my husband and I made to build this life together -- our shared life and the distinct, amazing little human life -- was not only correct, but has been worth every rough moment. It's a start, anyway.

I'm super busy; I'm a mom. I'm also still myself -- so pretty lazy (still/again). It took me, per usual, between 6 and 12 months to write this blog entry.

And I'm not done.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

This is the five-year plan I detailed to my college screenwriting teacher: 
I meet Zach Braff's sister (my five-year plan assumes he has a sister -- it does not include checking Wikipedia to see if this is actually the case) at a fine clothing retailer when we reach for the same shirt at the same time. The shirt looks better on me so she lets me have it. I then become best friends with her brother and, by extension, everyone in Hollywood. I parlay this friendship with everyone in Hollywood into a studio bidding war for the rights to my Rock Hudson biopic screenplay (which I have never written or even outlined), in which I would play the role of Doris Day. Upon the film's release, I win all of the awards, have a 5-page spread in Tiger Beat, and am interviewed by Jon Stewart, who kisses me on the cheek upon greeting me. I have to stop answering Zach Braff's texts to get him to leave me alone.

We are not far from the five-year anniversary of the expiration of that five-year plan. Here's my updated five-year plan:
I continue to wake up in the morning. I make enough money to feed my family and keep me in the finest contact lenses. I smile in pictures and in real life. Once a month, I might write something I'm proud of. I perform stand-up like three times a year; my coworkers refer to me as "basically a famous comedian" when clients visit. A thing I wrote in 2011 or something gets picked up and run by the Huffington Post or another aggregator. I do not receive monetary compensation for the piece. I tweet something at Trevor Noah and he favorites it but does not retweet it. Every year I consider starting a podcast, but I don't. Twice a year I consider starting a blog about podcasts, but I don't. My son makes it to his sixth birthday and doesn't even resent me much. He is a motivated, handsome, compassionate genius and has to stop answering Zach Braff's texts to get him to leave him alone.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Tonight my toddler fished a booger out of his nose all by himself for the first time!

Then he walked over to my dresser, opened my underwear drawer, dropped the booger in, closed the drawer, and strutted the fuck away, never to see that piece of snot again.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Someone I knew 15 years ago died suddenly yesterday.
To call him a friend would be a mis-characterization of our relationship and would trivialize the many full, dear friendships he did have in the impressive life he lived.
I knew him best in freshman year of high school. We sat at the same table at lunch. And we argued. Every day, we agreed to disagree, and we exchanged words, and we rolled our eyes at each other, and we laughed. We called each other terrible names that we didn't mean. We called each other terrible names that we did mean. And we smiled and gesticulated wildly and we thoroughly enjoyed each other's company. "Fighting" with him was often the highlight of my day. We respected and reviled each other.
After our lunch schedule changed, we fell out of touch. I didn't know him at all after high school, except for what I learned from Facebook, which seems to be an accurate account:
He was in law enforcement, a parole officer.
He had a wife and three boys under the age of three, whom he loved dearly.
He loved God and shared this love with others.
He and I have been Facebook friends for years, but I don't think we ever interacted -- not one Like, not one comment. We were still on opposite ends of the political spectrum and I had to force myself to refrain from arguing with him on more than one occasion. His opinions, though always expressed intelligently and diplomatically, made me angry -- not playful high-school-lunch angry, but irrational Internet angry. So I didn't engage. We were not friends.
Still, I watched his Facebook life in awe. He had a beautiful family for which he was demonstrably grateful, and I loved seeing pictures of his sons. He had grown into a father, a husband, and a proud public servant. He was a good man, and to hear his friends tell it, he was a Godly man.
I don't fully comprehend the sadness I feel. I valued him, but I didn't really know him. I don't even know if I liked him. But he was a good man and a friend to many, and his death is just flat-out unfair.
He touched my life more than I was conscious of. His ripples were far reaching. All of ours are.
I am so profoundly sad for his wife and children. Having a child, I can't help but try to imagine what she's going through, and even just the imagining is insufferable. I am sorry. I am sorry. I am sorry.
...
He filled a page in my freshman yearbook -- an epic poem in Sharpie -- full of swears, obscene inside jokes, and confusing stick figure drawings. And then, upon hearing that my mom might see it, he scribbled out the obscenities and replaced them with kind words. He was thoughtful like that.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

PJs

My son is a giant. He ceased to be a baby the minute we switched from footie pajamas to 2-piece pajamas with monsters printed on them.
He's a little boy now, and I can't help but try to hold on, because it feels like it really wasn't that long ago that I was wearing a little boys' pajama shirt with monsters printed on it. Reading shitty poetry at a sparsely attended open mic, in college.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Today

Today my son learned how to paddle in the water, how to brush Daddy's hair, how to kiss his books goodnight, and a hundred other things I didn't even register.



Today I learned that Guy Pearce is Australian.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Thirty

Good afternoon. I am now thirty and am available for conversations about the following:
  • electric vehicles
  • station wagons
  • electric station wagons
  • 401k match
  • Taylor Swift as a brand
  • baby gear
  • the tiny house movement
  • OMG, remember Trapper Keepers?
  • Benghazi, I guess
  • my skin care regimen
  • who makes the best iced coffee
  • Did you know John Cameron Mitchell was the voice of the Dunkaroos kangaroo?
  • parental leave policies around the globe
  • the Coca-Cola Freestyle machine and why doesn't it include a cream soda option?
  • any episode of Friends
  • sleep training
  • have we created a monster in Mark Wahlberg?
  • the future of podcasting
  • Twitter as a valuable market research tool
  • The Americans, Wednesdays on FX!
  • horchata