Stone Free

An onerous night. Little sleep.

Pain: acute; shifting, aching, throbbing. Can’t sit up: hurts too much. Must lie down: momentary relief. Now lying hurts: must sit up.

Walk around: bad idea.

Try to shit: pressure on the old chocolate sphincter provides temporary relief. Nothing comes out. Shat too many times already.

Go back to couch. Can’t sit up: hurts too much. Really very painful now.

Reminded of own mortality.

Call an ambulance? No, try to make it through the night.

Writhe for hours. Family asleep upstairs. Mustn’t disturb them. Stay here. Hope they don’t encounter corpse in the morning. Would spoil breakfast.

Awake in yesterday’s clothing. Slept. No pain. Wait… a dull ache. Manageable.

Make children’s breakfast. Pain returning.

Make Eloïse’s lunch. Now it’s intense again.

Call doctor. Voice mail. Wanker.

Call doctor again. Voice mail. Wanker.

One last time. Voice mail. Wanker.

Pain slips away into nothingness. What?

Bike Eloïse to school.

Pop in on doctor without appointment. Piss in cup. Confirms suspicion.

Leave surgery. Pain returns. Sod’s law.

Spend morning pissing blood. Fall asleep twice on couch. Tired.

Awake again. No pain. Doesn’t return. Relief.

Passed a fucking kidney stone. Always wondered how it would feel to have a pebble scrape its way down a ureter. Don’t recommend it.

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Child Number 3, Take 2

It’s been quite some time since I posted anything here. “Why is that?” you don’t ask.

Well, it’s no secret that I’m a fervent critic of Facebook and its reduction of human interaction to an endless stream of subatomic banality, but I can hardly continue to revile the shibboleths and platitudes of the narcissists and voyeurs who populate it, if the reading fodder I dispense here is of equally dubious literary value.

Apart from anything else, who gives a flying fuck about what I did today or what I have to say about it? No-one; and that’s not even a bad thing.

And so, once again, dear non-reader, this entry is not for you, but for me: a sly ruse to circumvent my ailing memory and pass information to my future self, without the need to rely on my flabby grey matter as a temporal bridge.

I recently returned from the family’s annual jaunt to The Great Satan, where, as usual, I spent a significant amount of time immersed in a sociologically fascinating study of people (in)voluntarily engaged in carefully choreographed seasonal tribal ritual. In English-speaking countries — and also those where a simplified derivative is spoken — they call this period Christmas. It’s an exhausting experience, for both participants and casual observers alike.

Foreign cultures are by times invigorating and fatiguing and perhaps none more so than America, with its full frontal assault of the senses. A parody of other western cultures, it becomes a caricature of even itself around Yuletide. You can think of it as the world’s largest termite mound. Viewers of a nervous disposition are advised to exercise caution.

Anyway, before I succumb to the temptation to rant about the things about America that have raised my ire over the last few months — and lo, they are many! — let me nudge you forward to the present day, or, more accurately, last Friday.

First, the necessary background: Sarah’s pregnant again.

You may recall that her last pregnancy ended up looking like an outtake from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in our bathroom: all the gore, but none of the baby. A miscarriage, a cruel swindle: one of the many ways that life has of raising its middle finger and whispering under its breath, “Fuck you”.

Anyway, the wake of that little episode dragged on for months. To cut a long story short, although the embryo had died in April, Sarah wasn’t back to normal gynaecological health until the end of September, at which time her menstrual cycle normalised and she returned to fertility. Intense, er, goal-orientated activity then led to a new pregnancy in November. Good news, of course, but not without a certain amount of largely irrational anxiety.

That anxiety reached its climax last Friday, for that was the day of our first ultrasound appointment. You may recall that it was at this very appointment during the previous pregnancy that we learned that our baby was dead. It’s fair to say, therefore, that we biked over to the ultrasound practice with a certain amount of apprehension in our gut, which, the longer we were left to our own devices in the waiting-room as our appointment became steadily further removed from its scheduled time, turned into nail-biting anxiety.

Once ushered inside the room with the medical apparatus, we were eager to begin the proceedings. The sonographer was a sympathetic woman, and she wasted no time in smearing gel over Sarah’s belly and sliding the scanner around.

The horror of almost a year ago started to unfold in front of our eyes anew, as the sonographer failed to find any trace of an embryo with her external examination of Sarah’s belly.

“Fuck! Not this again! How is it possible? What’s damaged in there? Not another gory miscarriage! Not another period of months spent waiting for it to happen! It looks like we’ll only ever have two children, then. Fuck!”

A lot goes through your mind in those moments, the onset of panic.

When the sonographer informed Sarah that she needed to perform an internal examination to try to find the baby, Sarah surrendered to the moment and started wailing.

“Why is this happening to me? Why is this happening to me? You shouldn’t need to look internally at ten weeks! You should be able to see it. You should be able to see it, shouldn’t you? Shouldn’t you?”

This was exactly what had happened last time, when an internal examination confirmed that there was no living baby inside Sarah.

The sonographer was visibly concerned and no doubt also feeling some stress. She worked quickly to prepare the internal probe.

Up it went, with a grunt from Sarah. Delicacy is subjective when you’re that tense.

The sonographer twisted and turned the probe: nothing but shadows, a low resolution blur of black and white pixels. Hope fading fast, ebbing away like the blood of a fatally wounded stab victim.

Then, she angled the probe, turned a corner, crested a hill — How the fuck do I know? — and the unmistakeable form of a human embryo came into view.

“Sarah!” The hope in my voice was unmistakeable.

“Ian!” The caution in hers equally so.

Stunned by the absence of any trace of an embryo during the external examination, my emotional quest had unwittingly become one of seeing the image — any image — of an embryo on the screen. I had forgotten that any such embryo can still be either dead or alive.

But then… the pulsating pixels of a beating heart…

“Sarah! It’s alive! You’ve got a baby! It’s OK! You’ve done it!”

Cue Hollywood-style tears and sighs of relief, anguish and despair fading into shell-shocked quasi-acceptance of this complete reversal of fortune.

From dread to despair to relief to something approaching joy — no, definitely joy, but the acceptance of which was partially impeded by our jangled nerves and self-preserving scepticism — all in the space of a few minutes. The clichéd emotional rollercoaster had arrived at its destination. What a fucking ride!

The baby is entirely healthy and measured a gestational age of ten weeks and one day. Everything is as it should be. We left with the obligatory print-out of the scan.

Although profoundly content with the resolution, we stood outside, stunned and silent. We hugged instead of speaking.

At lunch, we were still unable to celebrate unreservedly. As we slowly ate our food, we mulled over the morning’s events, talking about and processing the emotions we had felt.

It’s now Sunday night and things have sunk in a little more. If it took a couple of days last time to adjust to the news of the loss of the embryo, it’s also taken a little while this time to accept the health of the new baby.

Within a few weeks, the chance of a miscarriage will significantly decrease and this episode will fade to become a dim memory. Which, as I said, is part of the reason for this entry: I never want to forget how I felt that Friday.

Both of my children mean the world to me, but I feel a bond with this new, growing baby that is unique, forged on the anvil of emotional and physical trauma that dominated much of our lives last year. We dealt with it quietly, in our own way, but it was not without its toll, a charge exacted most obviously in the implantation of fear, subtly passed from one pregnancy to the next, like a hereditary illness, by parents powerless to the inscrutable vagaries of nature. This child is very wanted.

Let the quest for a name begin.

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Deaf?

Eloïse had her annual weigh and measure appointment at school on Wednesday. They also did vision and hearing tests. The hearing test was the type where you wear headphones and raise your hand when you hear a beep.

Over the last few weeks I have found myself saying “are you deaf?” to her enough times that it had occurred to me that it was a good thing that she was having a hearing test. So when Ian came home and immediately asked me if she’s ever had her ears checked my heart sunk. She never had the newborn test because she was born at home in America and the complete lack of infrastructure surrounding home birth means that there’s nothing in place to facilitate hearing tests for babies who aren’t born in the hospital. When we moved here we asked for a hearing test when we first went to the consultatiebureau, but they only have the machinery sitting around for 2-week old ears. She was 3 months and in order to arrange a hearing test we were going to have to jump through some hoops. We eventually decided not to jump through those hoops because we could see clearly that she could hear.

Apparently at the test at school Eloïse only raised her hand for one beep. The woman turned it up to 60 dB and she still didn’t hear the beep. Shit.

I told Ian that my suspicion was that she was confused by the directions somehow. He assured me that he had questioned her at length and she had definitely heard only one beep. At school pick-up time Ian questioned Eloïse’s teacher. She had also never noticed her having a hearing problem. But she told us that one boy in her class is extremely hard of hearing and no one would ever know it because he compensates so well with lip-reading. But it’s pretty hard to get Eloïse to look at your when you’re talking and she always responds verbally so I didn’t see how that could be the case with her.

When she got home I questioned her about the test. She told me that she only heard one beep on the first test and no beeps at all on the second test. I said “didn’t you hear anything at all?” and she said “I heard oo-oo, but not ee-ee.” Ah ha. “How many times did you hear oo-oo?” “Lots, but that wasn’t what I was supposed to listen for!”

She went back for a repeat test the next day and passed the test. Case closed. It’s funny because at the parent evening the teacher was going on and on about how the current group of kids is really attentive to detail (read: anal) such that she can’t get away with anything. If she promises that a certain book will be read four days later and a different book is read, they will point it out. If she tells a story differently, they correct her. If she moves something from its usual spot, even something that they don’t play with, they ask where it has gone. When I heard about this class make-up I certainly recognized Eloïse’s personality in it. I guess it’s no surprise that she took the directions to listen for the “beep” very literally.

In unrelated news, this is a picture of Eloïse’s latest school craft project. It’s a spiderweb that she made all by herself. She is very proud.

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Self-portrait

Eloïse did a self-portrait this morning before school. She gave it to her teacher but I had to take a photo first because we were both impressed with how the little figure matched her outfit today. Ian didn’t want her to give it away!

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Guitar Lessons

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Eloïse has been asking for guitar lessons on and off for the last year. We finally arranged them and she began last week. She was painfully shy at the first lesson, sticking her fingers in her mouth and clinging to us, not speaking, etc. It bordered on embarrassing. But the teacher had been forewarned and he was really great with her. She actually participated for the second half of the lesson and was very keen to return.

Ian took her to the Spanish guitar shop this morning and bought her a beautiful little guitar that is just her size. Then she had her second lesson this afternoon.

This one was much better. She still didn’t utter a word but her hands weren’t in her mouth and she sat on her own. She did everything he taught her and, to my eye, did it quite well. By the end of the 30-minute lesson he had begun teaching her to read music.

When we got home the guitar came out immediately. She arranged her animals in an attentive position and gave them a concert. She asked me if I wanted to hear the sun (she plucked the highest string), the wind (she strummed across all the strings), the thunder (she knocked on the body of the guitar), or the mouse (she played the strings up at the top of the neck by the tuning pegs). These little analogies were all her own invention. (As an aside, her school certainly has no academic focus at this age but I think it really does foster this sort of imaginative thinking.)

I’ll be eager to see how her enthusiasm holds up to the test of time.

Posted in Children, Life | 5 Comments