Anchors Away

Twenty years ago today, I bought a car. Or at least, I started the day buying a car and ending it having a baby. It all happened so fast.

My husband at the time and I, babies ourselves, were about to have one and having just moved to the suburbs from Hoboken, were in the market for a second car. I had already started my maternity leave – unable to cope with the long train ride in and out of the city each day – and he was off for the Columbus Day holiday.

And so, much like Columbus whose journey brought him to an unexpected destination, we set sail in search of an extra set of wheels and ended up with me barfing up a giant meal in the hospital before giving birth.

Here’s what I discovered on that day all those years ago: being a mom is hard.

For months, I had envisioned all sorts of happy scenarios as I rubbed my growing belly and religiously devoured What to Expect but none of it prepared me for the reality of actually having the baby. I had been so focused on the actual birth that I was not prepared for the day-to-day slog of parenting.

And so I had my truly excellent natural childbirth, bringing my 7-pound son easily into the world, and then everything went off script. He couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t expel the pesky placenta. We both labored until being whisked off to the neonatal unit for him and the operating room for me.

I ended up on the sad-mommy floor, the section of the maternity ward that shielded moms whose pregnancies went awry from all the happy families cooing over their newborns with rooms overflowing with balloons and doting grandparents. It was like being in the Land of Misfit Toys, where for one reason or another, our square-wheeled babies couldn’t come join us for a snuggle in our hospital bed.

For many years afterwards – long before I had to end my marriage or had a child slip into the darkness of depression – the hardest thing I ever had to do was leave that hospital five days later without my baby. I had to leave him there, alone in an incubator with tubes running down his throat and wires attached to a shaved patch on his tiny head, and that, my friends, sucked.

I remember standing on the curb in front of the hospital with my mom and my mother-in-law waiting for my husband to come pull the car around and trying not to totally lose it, when the mother-in-law, probably trying to help take my mind off the dire situation, asked me how much weight I needed to lose.

Seriously.

And of course, the rest happened so fast. The baby quickly recovered and in less than a week, was home and crying all the time and making me wonder what the hurry was getting him out of the hospital in the first place. While he was there, I had been religiously pumping breast milk at home so that when he could finally be fed, I would be more than ready to accommodate his little thirst. We immediately began passing thrush back and forth to each other, which for him meant a little yeasty white patches inside his pink mouth and for me it meant searing pain across my left breast. Like it was on fire (which probably didn’t compare to the mind altering pain of the cracked nipples his siblings induced while feeding in the future, but I digress).

So, here’s what I learned 20 years, three more kids and one less husband later, I was reading the wrong book all those years ago. What to Expect When You’re Expecting? That’s completely misleading. Moms-to-be should read something like, You’ll Never Know What to Expect Parenting or Never-Say-Never as a Mom.

Because we are in many ways setting sail in unchartered waters when we become parents. We think we are clever, with our course clearly mapped and plugged into the GPS of our lives. But kids are tricky and bring with them lots of variables, their insecurities and emotions are their winds and tides that can blow you off course in a heartbeat. So we often end up standing on the shores of some strange land, not where we expected to be, much like Columbus ending up in the Bahamas rather than Asia. But here’s the thing: as much as I was sure 20 years ago that my life would follow a certain trajectory, I’ve discovered that it’s better in the Bahamas.

2 thoughts on “Anchors Away

  1. so glad to see that you are writing regularly, amy. when we met in marie’s writing class, you were newly divorced or separated and i was postponing mamahood for just a bit longer. now i have an infant and toddler so i appreciate your mother-of-four wisdom. can you write about how you knew four was the # for your family? toddlerhood is a lot more eyerolling and sighing for me than babyhood but i still wonder if we are done done.

    • Jihee it’s so good to see your name and learn about what’s been keeping you busy since we met in our memoir class! I’m a bad one to ask about having kids because I’m like a drunk who can’t get enough when it comes to babies.

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