The Sibling Thing

Growing up I idolized my sister. I would eagerly count down the days until she visited and then hover outside her closed bedroom door in the morning, waiting impatiently for her to wake up. When I was little I would savor the sticks of gum she casually handed me, eating them a third at a time, reveling in the way they made me feel so grown up, so sophisticated. Eventually the gum became coffee, and the coffee became wine, but whatever it was, she knew all about the adult things in life, and I wanted to be just like her. It took me well into my adult life to realize I didn’t like make-up, because she would always send me the latest make-up or face cream that she was into, and I would store it away, saving it long past the expiration date because I couldn’t bear to part with something that came from her, or using it in teensy tiny little bits so that I could be just like her. 

So, imagine my surprise when Lucy was born and I realized that the primary task of Lucy and Logan’s early siblinghood was going to be Helping Her Survive It.  Sure, granted, there are some critical differences. My sister and I never lived in the same state because she lived in Georgia with her mother, so time together was a scarcer resource than it is for most siblings. Also, she is 12 years older which means that by the time I came along her impulse control was pretty well developed. Plus, she and I both avoid conflict of any kind like the plague, so I don’t think we’ve ever actually had a fight, or even an open disagreement.

Needless to say, nothing about my own experience as a sibling prepared me for raising siblings 2 1/2 years apart. When I was pregnant with Lucy, Logan was over the moon with excitement. Every day he would ask to take out the doppler and listen to her heartbeat. He would lay his hands on my belly and say: “Come out, Lucy, we are ready to meet you!” We bought him all the books we could find on adjusting to a new sibling, and told him over and over again the story of what the expect when it was time for her come. He picked out a special present for her to bring him when she got here, and he would gently remind her in my belly not to forget his truck, his Jeep, and his hair clip. Everybody kept asking us if he was ready, and I would say “He’s excited, but I’m sure he has no idea what is coming.” How could he? We didn’t either, and he was only two.

When he came to the hospital to meet her for the first time it was all very anticlimactic. He took one curious glance at her, lying there in my arms, and then he spotted the juice box on my tray, noticed that it clearly had a lot more to offer, and started in begging us for that. Once we brought her home though, Logan’s excitement returned full force. Every time he saw her he would exclaim: “Lucy! We are so glad you are here!” and run to crush her with his chubby little body, or forcefully turn her head so she could see him better, or “hand” her a big, hard toy right on top of her face. Thus began a vicious cycle where he would accidentally hurt her with his exuberance and then he would feel so bad for doing so that he would lash out and intentionally hurt her again. I am pretty sure this is a cycle we all go through at some point as humans, accidentally hurting one another and then doing it again because their tears or yelling are too hard to hear and anger is easier to feel than guilt or shame. Plus, underneath his excitement there were likely some big and very justified feelings about being displaced and having to share his moms’ previously undivided attention. Still, I was totally unprepared both for the intensive monitoring that would be required to keep a little sister alive, and for the rage I would feel watching him hurt her.

It was hard to have compassion for Logan and remember that he himself was a tiny human being just trying to figure out his new world and his place it in, when compared to his even tinier new sister, he suddenly seemed so very big and dangerous. I wanted so badly to protect her, and struggled to reconcile the soft, safe, cuddly newborn world we had been able to raise Logan in with the chaotic, whirlwind of a world our daughter had entered into. Instead of lullabies and tummy time, she spent most of her infancy strapped to our back to keep her out of harm’s way, listening to the sound track of all the negotiating, limit setting, and let’s be honest- yelling- that comes along with raising a 2-3 year old. At 10 months old, not only can Lucy say “No, no, no,” while emphatically shaking her head back and forth, but she’s heard us use 1,2,3 magic to get Logan to comply with a direction so many times that when she hears someone say “one” she will helpfully offer up “do!” (aka, “two”) right after.

Cari, whose sister is only 18 months younger, assures me that all of this is a normal, healthy part of sibling hood. The older one puts the little one in their place and pushes them around a bit, while the little one learns both to fight back and to tattle with the best of them. And boy oh boy, did Lucy learn these little sister moves quickly. At seven weeks old, not yet even able to roll over,  when Logan started to lay on top of her, Lucy took both arms and shoved him right off of her. Shortly thereafter, she learned to look directly at us and shriek or cry emphatically if he so much as came near her in a manner she didn’t care for.

If we ever left them alone in a room together, inevitably we would hear Lucy’s loud siren wail and come back to find Logan standing over her looking guilty but steadfastly maintaining his innocence. “What happened, Logan?” we would ask. “I didn’t do anything!” he insisted.

We quickly learned a trick for uncovering the truth. Although he would maintain he had no idea why she was crying if we asked him what happened, if we asked him to apologize to his sister, he would turn to her and say “Sorry!” in an accusing tone of voice. “For what?” we would ask. “For hitting/kicking/biting/”snatching”/”bopping”/sitting on you,” he would reply, a hint of remorse in his voice.

And then, just when I started to fear that this might be the extent of their relationship,; that we had had a second child only to spend our days constantly making our oldest feel bad for hurting his sister and our youngest feel the world was not a safe place, light broke through. Gradually, slowly, yet somehow all at once, the magic happened. And it’s parenting magic, which is to say that it’s eight parts exasperation and exhaustion to two parts the purest, deepest joy you’ve ever known.Somehow, no matter what the laws of mathematics might say, the two will always be greater than the eight. Lucy learned to crawl, and all of a sudden just as often as we were putting Logan on time out for pushing her over or “bopping” her on the head, we were as likely to find them both giggling in a game of hide and seek or peek-a-boo. He would crawl ahead of her, hiding behind walls and then popping out and surprising her as she crawled happily along behind him. Lucy reaches her arms out for him when she sees him now, and when he brushes his teeth she insists on having her own toothbrush and mimicking the “ahhh” sound he makes while he opens wide.

Just last night, while we were getting the kids ready for their bath, I was changing Lucy’s diaper and Logan walked up, saw that she had a diaper rash, and said: “Poor, poor Lucy, that looks like it hurts!” Then, he ran and brought me some diaper cream and insisted I put it on so her bum-bum didn’t hurt. Next, I put her down and he ran into the bathroom while she crawled happily along behind him. Logan slammed the door to keep her out, accidentally slamming it  against her forehead, and she started screaming, which caused him to cover his ears and yell: “Stop it Goo!” (his pet name for her) loudly right in her face. Then, while I picked her up to comfort her she peed all over me. Logan dissolved in giggles, delighted at this turn of events, which quickly turned her tears to giggles, but then he slipped in her puddle of pee and he became the one who was sobbing. A few minutes later I finally got both of them and my pee-soaked self into the tub, only to find her shrieking again in the split second I turned my back to grab the soap, and Logan was insisting: “I didn’t bite her, my teeth just accidentally bumped into her face!”

This action packed five minutes sums up just about every five minutes around here these days. It is what it means to have siblings two years apart, I suppose. They will protect each other and hurt each other and love each other and frustrate each other, in an endless cycle, most likely for the rest of their lives. It amazes me to watch them, to see this early relationship grow and imagine all the lessons it will teach them about how to say you are sorry and how to make up; how to fight and forgive and stand up for yourself and move on. All of these are things it took me well into adulthood to figure out how to do well, and I am glad they will have each other to practice with.

After I closed the door to the kid’s room, having tucked them safely in, Lucy began to cry. Logan’s little voice floated under the door: “What’s wrong, Goo? You miss Mama? It’s ok, don’t worry.” I assumed he was going to barge out and come get us, brotherly protection in it’s own right, but instead he began to softly sing: “Goodnight, sleep tight, tomorrow day… Sweet dreams, good night!” As I stood at there door, my ear pressed against it, he hummed softly while they drifted off to sleep and it was rare, glorious perfection.

 

Stay and Fight

This whole politics thing is really not my jam. It’s not that I like to bury my head in the sand while the fate of our country, and by extension the world, gets decided for me…but ok, yeah, it’s pretty much exactly like that. I mean, I vote, at least in the major elections, but getting into a political debate, dialogue, conversation, crazy-making-holiday-ruining-I-can’t-believe-we-all-share-blood-and-disagree-this-much-fight, or whatever else you might like to call it, is always at the bottom of my list. It doesn’t matter what the list is. Things That Will Ruin Thanksgiving, list. Reasons I Hate Watching the News, list. Things That Make Me Feel Hopeless, Powerless and Grumpy, list.

Basically, staying out of a political conversation is one of my superpowers. I know, I know, the personal is political, we have to use our voice, we have to pay attention. But I’m a pragmatist, and the one thing I remember from my college social psychology course is that the more you argue the opposite perspective with someone, the more they leave convinced that their original view was correct. So, then, you might reasonably argue that I am doing my part by keeping my mouth shut. At least, I’ve tried to argue that before. Of course, by trying to convince you of that, I’m probably just convincing you that the opposite is true. That it is my responsibility to speak. But hear me out, I have my reasons.

I’ve gotten involved in politics precisely once before. It was the fall of 2008. Obama was running for election, Cari and I were students at Fuller Theological Seminary, and we were planning a rushed, top secret wedding. Those are not exactly two adjectives you hope to see used to describe your wedding. Rushed, to take advantage of the brief window of time when we had the right to get legally married before the good people of California voted to take it away from us with Proposition 8. Top secret, because if the administrators at Fuller found out about our relationship, let alone our marriage, they would have kicked us out while we were still full of student loans but devoid of degrees.

We made contributions to the No on Prop 8 campaign out of our teensy tiny grad school budget. We marched in rallies and made signs and t-shirts. We organized protests and massive (to us) distributions of letters of concern to the students at my Alma Matter Azusa Pacific urging them to vote and speak up for us. We even made cold calls to voters (ok, I am not 100% sure we did that last one… maybe I just signed up for it and then chickened out, but you get the idea, we were invested).  

Then we stood up in front of our closest friends and family and vowed to love another until death do us part, while our brave pastor married us without the support of her congregation, but by the power invested in her by the state of California, nine beautiful words. Then, just two days later we watched as some of those very same people who had been at our wedding voted to take away our right to marry. “It’s not personal,” they said. “We support you, just not those people,” they said. But you see, it was very, very personal. We are those people.

Which is why I must now break my eight year vow of silence and speak.

Friends, family, internet readers, we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of this country. We simply cannot stand by and watch as someone whose entire platform is the fear of the “other” runs for or, God forbid, wins, the most powerful position in the world. This has been tried before, and it has not gone well. He is not the first man to mobilize a nation behind the idea that a group of people in the minority are responsible for all the things that are wrong in that country and that all you have to do to make things right for you is to get rid of the people who don’t look like you, act like you, or pray like you. This is the stuff of genocides, the Holocaust, internment camps. This is some scary shit. The fear of the “other” is a tried and true method of united a bunch of people who wouldn’t otherwise agree with each other around the central idea that we would all be better off without “them,” whoever they are. If we had all the power, we’d be richer, safer, happier. Kick them out, keep them quiet, lock them up. When we make someone the “other,” we dehumanize them, and when we dehumanize someone, it is far too easy to justify whatever we might do to them in the name of protecting ourselves. And that, folks, is not just the stuff of nightmares, it is the stuff of history.

You know this, I think you do. By and large it appears, at least from Facebook, as though most of the people I know are at least on some level concerned that this man would not make a terrific leader of the free world. But here’s the piece it took me a little longer to come to: we cannot move to Canada.

I love Canada, don’t get me wrong. We took a trip to Vancouver Island a few years ago with our friends Lisa and Shasta when our son Logan and their daughter Ella were still babies and our second children were still romanticized maybes instead of precisely 1/2 of the chaos in our lives. The kids played on the endless beach out front of our hotel and every hike ended in a waterfall. They had idyllic little towns where goats grazed on thatched roofs, and it was just all around ridiculously perfect. And yes, I saw that article about that island in Canada where they are begging the fleeing Americans to come move there and pointing out that the houses are like a dollar per square foot and the paid family leave actually lets you stay home long enough to get to know your baby before handing them off to a stranger (don’t get me started on this one because it’s really, really close to my heart right now). I know we crashed Canada’s immigration site after super Tuesday because I went to see for myself and sure enough, they had a message up apologizing for the delays due to unexpected volume. I get it, I do. I mean- goats on a roof, paid family leave, cheap houses, kind leaders, say no more. Count me in. Except we can’t leave. We have to stay and fight.

We must use whatever power and privildge we have to be a voice of reason, compassion, mutual respect and humankindness. As a white person, born in this country and raised in the dominant religion of this country, I’ve got plenty of power of privilege. Enough to be able to think about moving to Canada, and enough to know that I have to stay. Because as Martin Luther Kind Jr. once said: “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

And I do, I absolutely remember their silence. When my marriage was up for public vote, and all those ads ran about how the homosexuals were ruining the fabric of marriage, family, and this country; when I sat in those classes at Fuller and listened to my professor call being gay an abomination to the Lord that belonged back in the DSM as a psychiatric condition, let me tell you, their silence was deafening.

So let us be brave, my beautiful ones. Let us have those hard conversations. Let us speak up for our Muslim neighbors, our black neighbors, our neighbors who have immigrated here from places near and far. Let us march, let us vote, let us dream, let us fight. Let us use our voices, both now, to help prevent this terrible fear from winning power over our country, and after, in the event that it does. Now is not the time for silence, because silence is consent. If we do nothing- if we say nothing- our neighbors will have no choice but to assume we agree that they do not matter, or belong, or deserve. And they do, and we do, and you do. And now is the time.

Two is Ten

When we were pregnant with Lucy, we had a couple of people tell us “two is ten” as a somewhat ominous warning about what we were getting ourselves into by adding a second child to the mix. Now, as I’ve mentioned before, I do tend to be a pessimist, but this seemed somewhat melodramatic even to me. I mean, I’m no math major, but two is two and ten is ten, and there are a lot of differences between them.

It took me about five days into the plural version of parenthood to see their point. We were doing fine, really, as long as both Cari and I stayed 100% focused on the task at hand at all times. When we kept a one to one defense on the kids and kept the demands low, as in, getting Logan dressed for preschool was the apex of our day, low, we were unstoppable. Then we did something crazy like Leave the House with Both of Them, and Cari did something crazy like Go Outside to Talk to Our Neighbors right before we reached that critical moment of making it out the door.

Logan decided to start potty training the day after we brought Lucy home from the hospital, because that’s how good he is at coming up with creative ways of refocusing our attention on him when it seems to be drifting, so we had the little portable potty packed up by the front door, ready to take with us. I was changing Lucy’s poopy diaper on the couch, because when you have a second child, that changing table is so not going to get any more use. So, there I am, right in the middle of cleaning up baby poop that Lucy had squirmed and gotten everywhere, when Logan announces: “I have to go pee pee!” and starts to pull down his pants. Before I can even make it over to him, he’s got his pants down and is standing over the teensy tiny little potty spraying a stream of pee around the living room, very little of which is even making it near the potty. I rush over to help him with his still novice aim, and then turn back to find that not only has Lucy smeared poop all over herself and the couch by now, but our dog Elliot is also eating it.

“Cari!!!!!!!” I bellow at the top of my lungs, loud enough to bring her running back in from the front yard where she was having the audacity to have an adult conversation. She returns to find both kids naked and crying, the house covered in pee and poop, and me, furious at her for having the audacity to leave me outnumbered. A few minutes later, Cari pulled her coffee out of the microwave, cold again after it’s third of fourth time being reheated, and went to take a drink anyway only to find a toddler sock in it.

This poop on your couch and pee on your floor and sock in your coffee moment is, in a nutshell, the difference between one kid and two. One of my clearest memories that captures the exhaustion and chaos of adjusting to life with a newborn when Logan was a baby was this time I sat down to drink a warm cup of tea after finally getting him off to bed, and looked down to realize I was so tired I’d gotten the cup and the tea bag, but hadn’t remembered to put the hot water in it. That’s one. With two, for starters, it’s going to be coffee and not tea, because let’s face it, you are going to need all the caffeine you can get. You are going to heat it up at least five times because let’s face it, parenthood is never having a hot cup of coffee again, and you are going to find a sock in it and have no idea how it got there and frankly, you are not even going to care, because you are covered in pee and poop anyway and it’s going to be a while before you even find time to wash your hands, so what’s the harm in a few sock germs anyway?

When we finally made it out the door that morning we waved feebly at the neighbors, lounging on their back porch with their newspaper and hot cup of coffee, chatting about who knows what but probably not poop, and hollered: “Sorry about earlier, two is ten!”

They looked at us with confusion, and I explained, waving a hand at the mewling newborn and the two year old running circles around us, “The children, they had me outnumbered.”

I mean no disrespect to those of you who actually have ten children, or anything in between. In fact, I mean nothing but total and complete respect. I honestly have no idea how you do it. Sometimes I see you out in public, managing three of more children like obedient little ducklings trailing along behind you and I am that creepy woman who stops and stares. You might be thinking I am placing judgement on your decision to have three of more kids, because that kind of stigma is real around here, where the houses are small and the mortgages are big, and people seem to think that two kids is reasonable but three is a little excessive. But I promise I’m not judging, I’m thinking: I have no idea how she does it. 

People will ask me if we are thinking about another baby and I will say, only half joking: “We thought we wanted three until we met two.”

Our margin for error is already so slim, I just can’t imagine fitting another child into it. Part of it was Lucy’s colic and the fact that she screamed non-stop for her first four months, and part of it is Logan is an incredibly exuberant, energetic, related little guy who was used to having both of our undivided attention whenever we weren’t working, but I think most of it is just that this is hard, hard work.

When Logan was a baby both of us gave him a bath together each night while gazing adoringly into his eyes and teaching him new words or songs, right up until Lucy was born. Lucy was about six months old the first time we even put her in the bath because she was finally sturdy enough for Logan not to drown her out of exuberance or jealousy, it’s a little tough to tell the difference with him.

Lucy splashed and smiled and looked generally amazed at the properties of water, and I was wracked with guilt because surely we could have managed to get her in the bath a few month sooner if we’d known she’d like it that much, instead of all those times we quickly passed her under the water in the middle of someone else’s shower and called it a day (ok, ok, I’ll be honest, there weren’t even that many showers…).

But that’s the thing with the second child, instead of brain enrichment exercises and motor development activities and baby massage classes, you are worried about things like Keeping the Baby Alive, because your three year old is always either trying to carry her around by the neck, or knocking her over to see what will happen, or leaving his sharp, glittery metallic stickers places where she can eat them and possibly cut open her intestines. Truthfully, you don’t really want to push those motor milestones anyway because now you know that sitting leads to crawling, and crawling leads to walking, and it all goes down hill from there. A non-mobile baby is a baby that you can a) find, and b) stand a better chance of keeping alive, and that’s more than half the battle right there.

Despite all of my non-encouragement, Lucy’s crawling now anyway, which means she’s doing things like finding the tissue box and eating several before Logan’s tattling skills come in handy and he lets me know. She’s talking now too, and of course one of her first words is “no,” because that’s a very helpful word when you’re constantly being kissed by the poor attention-starved dog, or being knocked over by your brother, and also because instead of lullabies and baby flash cards, that’s one of the words she probably hears the most around here. Even when you’re doing your very best at positive parenting and praise and you teach people how to do this for a living, there are still a heck of a lot of things to tell a three year old “no” about. Things like no, don’t feed your sister dog food, and no, I don’t believe that Dinosaur is the one who scratched her, and no, you can’t didn’t earn your special treat because you woke up us and your sister up eighteen thousand times last night, and no, you can’t have chicken nuggets for dinner every single night even though, yes, I know you love them and you don’t love lentil and spinach pasta but I am doing my best here to keep all of you alive and well-fed and well-cared for and it is no easy task while trying to hold down a job and a marriage and some semblance of my sanity. Ok, I haven’t said that last bit, but I might one of these days, I really might.

And still, the obvious take away here is that two kids is sometimes ten times the work and stress and chaos, but it’s also ten times the love and amazement and wonder. You will not believe how different two kids raised by the same two people can be, and you will start to realize that instead of busying yourself taking credit for this and blame for that, you can just sit back now again and soak up how incredible it is to be a part of growing and loving and knowing these incredible human beings. Just when you think you’ve reached your breaking point your three year old will say something like: “I like how you made dinner Mommy, you did a great job” (even though he’ll still refuse to eat it a few minutes later), and your baby will light up when she sees you and wrap her chubby little arms around you and burrow her face into your neck, and you will know that being a mother brings out the best in your even more often than it brings out the worst. Even if you’re exhausted all the time, at the very least you’re living, actually living. You’re feeling all the extreme emotions life has to offer because you can’t just drift along comfortably when one minute you are seething with frustration that your three year old turns getting dressed into a 30 minute battle every. single. day. Then, the next minute you are bursting with pride to watch him crawling next to his sister, cheering her on.

But the other take away is this: that it is hard, hard work. I have absolutely every privilege and advantage a person could hope for when it comes to parenting, or at least a good number of them. An education in child development, a loving and supportive wife who is a fully present and participatory co-parent, the back-up of our extended family, and incredible community of friends and fellow parents. We have a house, jobs, the good health of our children and ourselves.

Still, there are moments and days, and weeks, and even months when raising these two tiny human beings takes absolutely every thing I have to give and pushes me to the edge of my sanity and doesn’t always show me a clear path back again. So let’s all try to be a little kinder to each other, those of us who are fellow parents and those of us who have parents, and those of us who might one day be parents or know someone who is.

I mean this both on a personal and a policy level. There are absolutely things this nation can do on a policy level, like, you know, pay parents to stay home with their teeny, tiny babies for a few months so you can actually get to know them and learn how to feed them and love them before throwing the demands of work and the incredible cost of child care back in the mix. Or, figuring out some kind of living wage that means a single parent doesn’t have to work three jobs and might actually get to see their child now and again. But there are things we can do on a personal level too, and that’s always been the level where I’m most comfortable anyway. We can stop all this ridiculous judgement and pressure over things like how you choose to feed your baby, or carry your baby, or raise your baby, and do our best to offer some compassion and understanding or a helping hand instead. Also, as two kind, elderly gentlemen taught Cari and I this week, we can tell each other “good job,” now and again, because your own kids might do it once in a great while, but it’s actually incredibly unlikely, and parents need some praise just as much as their kids do.

While I was at the grocery store the other day, wearing Lucy in the ergo and loading the groceries into my car, an older gentleman came up to me and said: “Let me help you, I don’t know how you women do it, carrying babies and doing the shopping, and all of that.” He loaded my groceries for me, and actually wound up spilling them everywhere because they were heavy and he was quite elderly, but I was so touched I was moved to tears. At first I was a teensy tiny bit offended at his summary of “women’s work,” and I also felt the urge to tell him that this was just the tip of the iceberg, and I also had another child and a job, and this was actually the highlight of my week because I got to sneak away from work a few minutes early and spend a quiet moment with my baby before entering the chaos. Instead, I just said thank you. Because even though trying to hold a baby while loading groceries is the least of my worries at this point, it was actually really nice to have a complete stranger pause for a moment in their day and say “hey, that looks hard. Nice job, and let me help you.”

Then, the other night while Cari was taking the kids out to have chicken nuggets for dinner because she doesn’t cook and I was working my second job, Logan was a big, big helper. He watched Lucy while Cari got the food, he helped Lucy eat, and he chatted with Mama about his day at school. This was huge because trying to eat dinner in public with the kids and both parents, let alone just one, can really turn into a disaster faster than you can say boo. It was even huger because an older gentleman came up to Cari at the end of dinner and said: “Congratulations, I’ve been watching you with your son and him with his sister, and he is so good with her, and you are so good with him, and you should be proud…you are doing a great job.” And Cari cried too, and she carried that with her just as I carried my moment with me, like a small treasure you can take out and examine when you need to, and then put back in your pocket for next time.

And you are, you are doing a great, great job. It’s not easy but you do your best, and you love your family, and you give them all you have and then you give them more. You make mistakes but you say you are sorry, and then you try again tomorrow, and you have so, so much love. I’m proud of you, for how hard you are trying, and how hard you are working, and if I see you out there in the big, busy world, I hope I have the courage and take the time to tell you so. I hope you do, too.

 

The Dark Days

These days, whenever I go out in public with Lucy, at least a small handful of people will stop us to make some variation of the comment : “She’s such a happy baby.” I smile, nod, and encourage her to give her chubby-fisted clumsy little wave that melts hearts across America like silly putty on a warm night (take my word on this one, you do not want to find out for yourself how melty silly putty can get. Your kid’s sheets will never be the same).

Or maybe it’s just my heart she does this too, but in any case, it’s cute. I mean, seriously cute. There is something  magnetic about a baby at around eight months of age.  It’s as if they are right at the cusp of being able to move around on their own and explore the world, but there is this brief window of time where they can’t quite do it yet, so they must instead draw the world to them with their sparkly eyes, crooked barely-there tooth grins, and utter delight at having found small, meaningful ways of communicating with the natives of this planet. You will wave to Lucy and she will wave back, grinning with pleasure at her success, then she’ll catch a glimpse of her fist in her periphereal vision and turn her hand towards her face, looking at it all wide eyed and shocked as if she’s thinking, did I do that? Is that thing mine? Her world is so absolutely chalk full of wonder at this age, and people will literally cross the street to peak into the restaurant window and soak up just a little bit of that wonder.

It’s not unique to Lucy, I know this because the exact thing happened with our son at this age. Still, every time someone calls her “a happy baby,” I savor it for a moment before tucking it away in my mind as a little bit of hope and healing.

Back in The Dark Days, it was hard to believe this day would every come. Lucy was our second baby, and all of our friend’s second babies were flexible, mellow little creatures who fit somewhat seamlessly into their parent’s already busy toddler-centric lives. I remember clearly this moment early in my pregnancy when we were over at our friends Lisa and Shasta’s house.  Cari, Lisa and I were all in the kid’s bedroom playing with the toddlers when Shasta got home and came into the room and said: “How long has the baby been sitting alone in the other room?” We all looked at her blankly for a moment, like, what baby?

Those who know me best know that I actually have a streak of deeply-rooted pessimism, and in that moment I did not think: Our second baby will be just like that.  No, quite on the contrary, I thought: no way will we have it that easy. I just had this hunch that because Lucy was our second baby, but my first pregnancy, there would be some critical piece of genetic information she would miss about the need to fit flexibly into our already chaotic lives.

Sure enough, after seven ridiculous days of early labor and regular contractions, Lucy arrived with a bang. She flew out, catching everyone but me by surprise. I knew full well I planned to push her out with that one big push after waiting half an hour for the midwife to make her way to our hospital room. I just didn’t realize this wasn’t clear to everyone else, and that there were some critical instructions- like the role of little pushes- the midwife hadn’t had a chance to share yet.

We knew there was meconium in her amniotic fluid, so we waited anxiously for those first few seconds before she cried as the NICU team hovered in the back of the room, prepared to whisk her away. Then, she let out this incredible, blood curdling scream, and she basically just didn’t stop.

For the next three or four months, she screamed. She screamed that first night in the hospital while all the other tiny newborns curled limply against their mother’s chests. She screamed on the short ride home, and she screamed that first night home. She screamed so loudly that at the apex of a particularly vigorous yell, the little nightlight in our bedroom suddenly turned into a spotlight. Unbeknownst to us it had a special feature designed to light your way to safety when the fire alarm goes off, and Lucy circa one day old, barrel chested with big, strong lungs, was louder than a fire alarm.

Sometime before the nightlight kicked it up to full alert, but after I had already kicked Cari out of the bedroom for the infanticidal gleam I sensed in her eye, Lucy and I lay side by side in the middle of the bed, staring at each other. She, clearly confused and in pain, and me, at an absolute loss for what to do. Then, she reached out her small little hand to grab mine and looked at me imploringly, as if to ask, will you help me? 

From that moment it was Lucy and I against the world, and boy did it feel like the world was against us. All of Cari’s attempts to point out that something wasn’t right and babies don’t normally scream for six or seven hours at a time, fell on deaf ears. All I heard was her saying that something is wrong with the baby you birthed, because mine didn’t scream like that.

We hadn’t expected the screaming, but what we really hadn’t expected was the sudden emergence of this “mine” and “yours” divide. When Logan was born, he was ours, ours ours, and we were fiercely proud of his equal attachment to both of us. But when Lucy was born, Cari felt acutely the difference in her instantaneous, hormone-drenched bond to Logan, and her feelings towards Lucy, whose screaming remained unfazed by Cari’s best efforts at bouncing, shushing, rocking, humming, pleading. This infuriated me wildly. She was perfect and there was Nothing Wrong With Her. She was fierce and strong and healthy, and so so screamed a lot, what’s wrong with that? Babies cry. We hadn’t wanted a passive, compliant little girl, anyway, right? We wanted her to be able to find her voice, and boy had she.

Our neighbor, who works for CPS, came over to check on us on several occasions, and I thought, how strange is that? Doesn’t she know that babies cry? Wherever we took her, people made comments like “Oh, my, she’s awfully upset, isn’t she?” or, “My goodness what a set of lungs she has!” I would give them a thin lipped smile-grimace that dared them to keep up their commentary.

And then one day, about three weeks in, she stopped. She stopped screaming, she stopped eating every ten minutes, and she actually slept. She napped for three or four hours. She stayed asleep as I took her to Logan’s soccer class, and she stayed asleep as we took him to dinner afterwards. She was this sleepy, peaceful little newborn, and we did what any reasonable parent would have done in our situation. We called Kaiser. “Something is wrong with our baby,” we told the advice nurse. “She is sleeping for three or four hours at a time, and she is waking only to eat and then going back to sleep. She hasn’t cried more than ten minutes all day.”

“Does she have a fever, diarrhea, or vomiting?” they asked us. “Is she limp, unresponsive, pale?”

“No, no, no, but you don’t understand. Something is wrong with her. This is not like her!” At some point during that conversation, as I listened to the advice nurse struggle to understand exactly what the problem was since we were reporting that our baby was acting exactly like a sleep newborn should, I realized that we had a situation on our hands. And the situation was not that Cari was trying to say something was wrong with Lucy because she didn’t love her, the situation was the something was wrong with Lucy.

The medical definition of Colic is the rule of threes: a healthy, well-fed infant who cries more than three hours a day, more than three days a week, for more than three weeks. I read this, looked over at my healthy, round cheeked, red-faced, screaming little girl and thought: Three hours a day? Three days a week? That’s nothing! What is this nonsense? Lucy cries at least twice that much…. And then I finally reached the end of denial.

Now that I was ready to accept we had a problem, I moved full force into Solving It. I spent hours reading about the causes, cures, and prognosis of colic, and frankly, the research sucks. Over and over again, I read that by definition colic means they don’t know what is wrong with the baby, and they don’t know what will help it. All they know is that eventually it ends. In the area of what it might mean for long term outcomes, health, maternal-child relationships, or the big T (temperament), I found basically nothing.

That was the big one for me, temperament. We put a lot of stock in it. When Logan was born this wonderful, soothing nurse who was a temperament specialist came and evaluated Logan and shared with us this story about how babies are born into the world the way that they will be in it, and how she saw triplets born, one curious and alert, one screaming, and one sleepy and reluctant to come out. Then she saw them three years later for a follow up and they entered the room that same way: one curious and calm, one screaming and tantrumming, one dragging along behind the others, rubbing her eyes sleepily.

Now, this was very helpful for us when our son came into the world wide eyed, contemplative, and curious. It gave us lots of hope and warm feelings about our future while we struggled through the crawling parade of sleepless nights. Never mind that he quickly turned into a delightful holy tornado of constant motion as a toddler, her message stayed with us none the less. You get what you get, when it comes to temperament, and you know what you got right out of the gate.

To be perfectly, brutally honest, it looked like what we got with Lucy was an absolutely gorgeous, healthy, amazing little girl who was going to give us hell for the rest of our days. Cari said Lucy’s motto was “protest first” because she protested any change as soon as it happened. She screamed when you put her down and when you picked her up. She screamed when you didn’t fed her, and she even took her mouth off the boob to scream between pretty much every swallow when you did. If it was between the hours of 3 pm and 10 pm, she was screaming. Often, when I looked at her, the lyrics: “she came in like a wrecking ball” played unbidden in my mind, although I wouldn’t admit this to anyone, especially Cari, until much, much later.

Each night while Cari got Logan ready for bed, I walked Lucy up and down our street in the Ergo, one hand on her butt and one against the back of her neck, doing a walking/bouncing/swaying combo while alternately shushing and ohm-ing, glaring defensively at anybody who passed, daring them to make some comment about the strength of her scream. I barely saw our son in those early months because I was so desperate to help our daughter stop screaming. I went from putting Logan to bed every night of his life to sneaking in for quick hug and a kiss after Cari had put him to bed, the desperate wail of Lucy pulling me quickly back out again.

After Cari went back to work, the sense of Lucy and I against the world only intensified. I was learning to differentiate her cries, and the one we heard from 3 to 10 pm was clearly not frustration, hunger, or exhaustion- it was pain. Something was hurting her, and I was on a mission to find it. Each day, as the clock inched closer to three, my dread would grow, knowing the Dark Hours were almost upon us. I would try desperately to get her to sleep so we could miss at least an hour of it, laying her in her swing, turned up on high, my hands resting on her belly and against her check, my thumb holding in the pacifier, trying to apply a constant pressure yet not fall over as the swing rocked dutifully back and forth. When she finally gave up her screaming and dropping into sleep, I would inch away, carefully avoiding any squeaky spots in the hardwood, tiptoeing a wide arc around the swing and holding my finger to my lips to silently shush the dogs, my eyes sending death threats towards them if they so much as jangled their collars. That was the first time I felt truly crazy, silently shushing our dogs as if they could understand me, telecommunicating to them that I was willing to rehome them or worse if they woke the sleeping baby. We were in a full on war here with this unknown enemy named colic, and I would take no prisoners.

Then, in those few stolen quiet moments, I would begin to research. Most of my reading pointed towards tummy troubles, which seemed supported by the fact that she while nursing Lucy would swallow milk, scream, swallow milk, scream. Some people said Colic was related to acid reflux, others said gas, oversupply of milk, overactive let down, too much foremilk, or allergies to foods in the nursing mother’s diet. The common theme was that something was wrong with my milk, something was wrong with me. I was poisoning my baby. I decided on a full force approach to what was quickly reaching a state of emergency. To get her to fall asleep at night, we would give her a triple-hitter of prescription antacid medication, gas drops, and homemade potent gripe water. Then, I would nurse Lucy to sleep, keeping her in an upright position to prevent reflux, but while also leaning back to prevent overactive letdown, without switching sides to prevent too much foremilk, all while standing up and rhythmically bouncing in the laundry room with the drier running as background noise, because otherwise she wouldn’t nurse or sleep at all. After an hour of two of this, it worked like a charm (mostly). There was nothing to it. Really, I’m being serious. Compared to the diet stuff, it was a piece of cake.

With the help of my trusty internet research, a poll of other moms at our Kaiser group, and a trial and error process that involved removing any foods that I’d eaten in the hours (or days) leading up to a particularly bad screaming episode, I developed a successful elimination diet: No fruits, vegetables, dairy, dairy bi-products, spices or seasonings, hummus, beans, flax seed, soy, quinoa, and caffeine. For those of you keeping score, that pretty much leaves unseasoned meat, unhealthy bread, rice, and almond or coconut milk. This isn’t exactly an inspiring diet to survive on yourself, let alone grow another person on, but any variation from it would result in an epic screaming session that would leave me wracked with guilt for the pain I’d caused my baby. This was the second, the third, the fourteenth time I felt crazy.

It’s hard to say, with a little distance from the situation, if she was really sensitive to all of those things, or if I just wound up eliminating all of the foods I regularly ate one by one because she cried after I ate them. But, regardless, it gave me enough of a sense of control over the situation to survive, and eventually, gradually, it passed. The crying stretches shortened, the volume turned down. The shenanigans needed to survive each bed time lessened, and finally, with great fear and trepidation, I began to eat again.

Just as the kind temperament nurse had been the voice of Logan’s babyhood that helped us survive his seven sleepless months, I gained a new voice for Lucy’s babyhood. One day while walking through the library with Lucy, a beautiful elderly Native American woman approached me and said: “I’ve been watching your baby, I hope you don’t mind, and I couldn’t help but notice how incredibly alert she is. She is so aware of the world around her. She will be a genius. The weight of guiding that genius will be your burden to bear as her mother, but it will be worth it.”

It has absolutely been worth it. As the months tick by Lucy’s colic becomes a smaller and smaller portion of her life. People have been calling her a happy baby for more months now than they marveled at the incredible pitch of her siren-cry. But “happy” is not the full story, nor should it be. She is still strong willed, opinionated, funny, social, smart, and observant. She is sensitive to her environment and quick to offer her thoughts on any changes in it. Right now, she has set all of that will and determination on learning how to crawl. She will get on all fours, rock studiously, flail her limbs in various directions, and then push back to sitting and clap, delighted at her incredible progress. We are too.

 

 

The Man

Yesterday, while trying to get the kids ready for school, I quickly exhausted the parenting techniques in my therapist arsenal and resorted to the age-old standbys: bribery and pleading. The bribery, this time in the form of a gummy bear, worked to help speed my three year old through the usually unsurmountable task of Putting Your Clothes On, but stalled out at that critical moment between Getting Into Your Carseat and actually assuming a position in which one can be buckled. Exasperated, I pleaded: “Logan, Mommy is going to be late to her meeting and get in trouble, you don’t want Mommy to get in trouble, do you?”

This was unexpectedly effective. He sat down, looked up at me with those curious blue eyes, and asked: “What will the man say, Mommy?”

Now, late or not, this was simply not a moment I could let pass by without comment. “The man won’t say anything, honey, because Mommy’s boss is a woman. Her name is Erica. And Mommy is a boss too, and Mommy is also a woman… lots of bosses are women.”

The Man has been popping up in our conversations with a baffling frequency these days. Given that Logan is the son of two feminist moms raising him in the progressive Bay Area where most of our friends fit the same description, we didn’t expect The Man’s appearance to be so early and so, well, stereotypical.

But society will have it’s ways of creeping up on you.

It started with a hilarious yet somewhat unsettling comment right after he began preschool: “I’m the man so I’m going to drive.”

It’s only progressed from there. While I was parking earlier this week, I muttered something about how I wasn’t going to make it into the spot and he piped up from the backseat with: “Do you need The Man to do it for you?” Another time, we got lost and he helpfully suggested: “Let’s ask The Man for help!” Any time he sees an empty construction site, he asks: “Why is The Man not doing Construction today?” Ditto for garbage trucks, tractors, etc.

When Logan was tiny, and by this I basically mean one or two and not three, so “tiny” is being used extremely relatively here, he had this incredible gender neutrality of which we were quite proud. He used “he” and “she” interchangably, and loved in absolutely equal proportions garbage trucks and necklaces, dolls and cars, the color pink and using his tools on everything. He was sweet, loving, cuddly, and sensitive while also rough and tumble, fearless, and confident. We were, admittedly, a little smug that we were raising him as a boy who could tap into and appreciate all the varied aspects of himself and his personality without the limits imposed by society.

Enter, The Man. With his ominous appearance, he is forcing us to face a few things sooner than we would have preferred. Things like how we will be only two voices that shape our son’s understanding of the world, and all the rest will be largely out of our control. Things like the incredible responsibility of raising Logan to be a wonderful man, when this is an area in which we have very little expertise.

The hard thing, the part we haven’t quite figured out yet, is how to balance our desire to foster his emerging male identity while also teaching our values on the subject. We want him to know that men and women drive, that men and women are bosses and construction workers. That I can park the car and figure out directions by myself, without asking for help, but that if I did need help it would be fine to ask for it, but I could ask a man or a woman, because both are helpful and know about these things. And furthermore, that not everyone identifies as a man or a woman, and that there are people in between, or who are born men but really are women, and visa versa, and that you don’t have to be defined by your gender, or that this definition may change and shift throughout one’s life, but that even if your own definition doesn’t shift, society’s certainly still has a lot of work left to do. Whew! See what I mean, it’s a complete rabbit hole, really. And he’s three, so there’s that.

Amazingly, the best tool we’ve found for the conversation so far is a Bernstein Bear book called “He Bear, She Bear” that my sister sent us from when her kids were little. I almost tossed it out as soon as I unwrapped it because I assumed it was ripe with gender stereotypes based on the title, the fact it was written in 1973, and the cover picture of a “she bear” in pink bows and a “he bear” in a blue shirt. But you know what? It’s actually pretty perfect for where he is at this exact moment.

It reads: “I see her, she sees me, we see that we are he and she. Every single bear we see is a he bear or a she (we add in “or a they”), every single bear we see, has lots of things to do and be. We could drive a dump truck, drive a crane, bulldoze roads, drive a train. We could fix a clock, paint a door, build a house, have a store… Be a doctor, make folks well, teach kids how to add and spell. Knit a sock, sew a dress, paint a picture, what a mess…. We’ll jump and dig and build and fly. There’s nothing that we cannot try. We can do all these things, you see, Whether we are he or she!”

It’s certainly not perfect, but it’s a start. Plus, there’s something about the fact that it was written in 1973 that I find oddly comforting. It reminds me that we’re not the first parents to try and raise children who will not be narrowly defined by the gender roles society sets out for them. Also, that any conversation is better than no conversation, because they are learning all the time anyway, and we better go ahead and throw our voice into the mix.

Then, last night, as I was putting Logan to bed after a particularly rough evening featuring the usual threenager line-up of yelling, tears, and hitting, Logan wrapped his arms around my neck and said: “I love you even when you’re mad and even when you’re sad. You’re a good boy, Mommy, and a big girl. But you can’t sit on my lap, or lean on me, because we might fall into the street together and that would be really, really ouchy!”

This made me think three things. One, that we must be doing something right, because here we have in front of us this incredible, sensitive, loving little human being who knows that we love him no matter what he is feeling or doing, but also understands that we should be thoughtful of the impact these things might have on others. Second, that there’s still clearly time for teaching on gender, because let’s face it, his thoughts aren’t quite fully formulated yet. And third, that we might finally, finally, be making some headway on teaching him to be aware of his body so that he does’t crush his baby sister, but hey, that one’s a topic for another day…

In the meantime, we do the best we can with what we have in front of us, and we try to teach him to do the same.

 

 

So You’re Having a… Person

I have this vivid memory of our next door neighbor Tom coming over last year to pick up some extra baby clothes. Both of our wives were pregnant with our sons, due in a month or so and just a week apart. I was passing on a stack of newborn clothes we’d received with clever little “I love my daddy” taglines and football helmets, irrelevant for our family both on the daddy and the football front.

“Are you guys feeling ready?” I asked.

He shook his head, “Niema’s always talking about getting this for the baby, and buying that for the baby. I keep trying to tell her we’re only having a baby for a year, but we’re going to have a kid for the next 17 years. We should pace ourselves.”

I nodded sagely, because I could tell that was what was expected of me in this moment as the fellow non-pregnant parent, presumably unimpacted by the hormones that had presumably taken over our spouses.

“I know,” I replied, holding up the onesie, “They’ll probably only fit in these newborn clothes for a minute.”

But still, as I handed over the unimaginably small clothes, I couldn’t help but feel he was missing the point. We were having babies. Teensy tiny little miracles who would not only require a host of baby clothes and contraptions, but would also change our lives in inexplicable ways. One day we would both go into hospital (it turned out it would in fact be the exact same day), and come out parents, responsible for keeping alive and loving the helpless little creatures who would fit into these doll-sized clothes. Yes, he was definitely missing the point. We were about to become the parents of baby boys, and this was a really, really big deal.

I understood that our baby wouldn’t be in newborn clothes for very long. What I clearly missed, as evidenced by the bins and bins of unworn or barely worn 0-3 and 3-6 month clothes now stacked in our garage, is how quickly he would also outgrow all the rest. That he would wear those 0-3 month clothes for, at the most, three months, and, more likely, a few short weeks. Even more, that three months would still be three months, even in Life After Baby.

From the starting line of pregnancy, when you are preparing and training and waiting with equal parts terror and excitement for that gun to fire so you can fly across the line and enter Parenthood, it feels like an eternity will pass between each stage: hospital, birth, going home from the hospital, first bath, first smile, and so on.

In many ways, it is an eternity. Breathe in, breathe out. Put one foot in front of the other. Spend endless moments and hours and days staring at the incredible little being in our arms, figuring out how to survive sleepless nights, perfecting your diaper change, and mastering the ever changing task of keeping everybody in your little family fed.

Then, with unimaginable speed you start barreling towards the larger milestones. Your baby sits, stands, takes his first step, says his first word, and all of a sudden he is a person. His baby cheeks give way to defined facial features. One moment he is a helpless, mewling little bean, and the next he is clinging to your leg with mischief in his eyes demanding “up?” “out?” “uuuuuuppppppp!!!”, clearly now capable of complex thoughts like “if she hasn’t done what I told her to do by now she must not have understood me, let’s try it a little louder and clearer!”

Incredible. I mean, it’s really, really incredible. Sure, your life changes quite a bit when you first have a baby. You’re suddenly responsible for keeping someone else alive and fed. The art of cinema will have evolved several times before you see another movie. You’ll be in such a constant state of exhaustion that you’ll do things like finally manage to make yourself a cup of tea but completely forget to put in any water.

But what they don’t tell you, what they can’t possibly tell you, is that the changes just keep right on coming. You’ll probably never get the hang of anything again, besides getting the hang of letting go of needing things to stay the same. What you knew yesterday is out the door because today is a whole new ballgame. Yesterday morning my son woke up in exclusive need of snuggles and cuddles to the point where I made all of our lunches and a crockpot dinner with a 23 pound toddler balanced on my hip, asking “this?” “that?” “bite?” and grabbing everything I touched. The day before that, he was moving so fast in the other direction that I couldn’t even find him until I searched the house high and low and finally located him hiding in the dog bed, playing with the TV remote and trying to eat the bed’s stuffing (toxic no doubt). This morning as I write, he’s decided that if I am going to get up at 5 am to better myself then so is he. He’s currently yelling “shit!” from his crib, which I can only hope is a hybrid version of his two current favorite words: “sit” and “this.”

To those who know me well enough to understant that I absolutely, unequivocally love my son and love raising him, I like to compare parenting to a lobster slowly boiling in hot water. The universe raises the stakes and challenges, along with the incredible joy and rewards, incrementally every single day so that you don’t ever quite notice how hot it’s getting in here. It sneaks up on you, so that one day you are suddenly looking back and realizing that two years ago you were spending your days sleeping in, taking spontaneous day trips, watching TV, and training for half marathons (oh alright, you were also mostly spending them working, but that hasn’t changed, has it?). Now you are spending them doing eighty five thousand more things than you ever did before, most of which include wiping snot and cleaning up behind a tornado who takes everything out of every cupboard in the house, but also includes teaching someone how to blow kisses, singing in public even though you always hated your voice, and soaking up the unparalleled feeling of two chubby little arms wrapped around your neck. And the thing about parenting is, you can look back on those “before” days and think at exactly the same time and in equal proportions: “I had no idea how lucky I was”, and, “I had no idea how lucky I was going to get.”

The Trying Trimester, Part II: Flounder

* Warning: This post contains vivid references to the first trimester and all of the unfortunate bodily functions it may entail. If these things make you queasy or uncomfortable, perhaps this is not the post for you! *

 

The reassurance offered by our first ultrasound did not last much longer than Nurse Beasley’s brisk goodbye. Shortly thereafter, we found ourselves lost in a sea of vomit, and even the anxiety of our first few weeks of pregnancy seemed like a luxury neither of us had the time or energy for anymore. The morning sickness started in the usual manner, with early morning nausea and things like brushing her teeth or smelling the garbage proving particularly difficult for Cari. We were optimistic at first, as we’d both read that morning sickness was correlated with a reduced risk of miscarriage. Besides, I was confident that I’d prepared for the challenge as well as anyone who wouldn’t actually be physically undergoing it possibly could. Starting in our fourth week of pregnancy, I’d begun to research cures for morning sickness and compiled our morning sickness emergency kit. By the time the first wave of nausea arrived, I’d already filled our cupboards with organic saltines, Preggie Pops, ginger chews, small-batch organic ginger ale, and a special blend of morning sickness prevention tea.

None of them were the least bit helpful. With the exception of the Preggie Pops and the saltines, which worked for about a week each, most of them went entirely untouched and even the smell or the mention of them triggered another bout of vomiting.

I think it’s fair to say that this is around the point where our paths diverged. Previously we’d been two women united in our quest to conceive, and then two women united in our terror that we had done so. Now, I began my fruitless but all-consuming quest to Be Prepared, while Cari embarked upon her own equally fruitless and all-consuming quest to Not Vomit.

And thus began the dark days of our pregnancy. Cari waking me at 5 am to rush to the kitchen and blend a smoothie in a desperate race to beat the vomit. Cari arriving at the front door after her two hour commute home from work with a bag of vomit in her hand. Cari calling to say that she wanted a particular dish for dinner, and then after I shopped for it and prepared it, discovering that even the smell of it triggered another bout of vomiting.  She lost weight and we lost hope. The idea that Cari was pregnant with our future child became a shiny, foreign object we couldn’t quite place. They say the simplest explanation is the easiest to believe, and the simplest explanation for us was the Cari had been afflicted by the Flu of All Flues Forever and Ever Amen. That, or a life-sucking parasite.

Most disappointing of all, for me at least, was how angry I was. I like to imagine myself as a graceful, giving sort of person in most circumstances, and the circumstance of my dearly beloved being pregnant with our long-desired child seemed like the sort of circumstance to bring out the best in a person. Wrong. I slammed down her cups of perfectly proportioned cranberry juice and water and sighed dramatically while fixing endless plates of bland potatoes and pasta. I scowled while scrubbing the toilet, and grumbled irritably about the little mouse noises coming from our bed at night as Cari worked her way down an unbelievable loud package of saltines. We’d gone from a well-balanced partnership to the roles of caretaker, and someone who relies almost exclusively upon the caretaker for sustenance. This, of course, was exactly what terrified me about the unimaginable responsibility of being a parent, and I didn’t adapt well to it’s early arrival.

Cari’s disappointment was equally palpable. The only thing she’d ever wanted, from her earliest memory of lovingly carting around a baby doll, was to be pregnant. Now, here it was—the penultimate experience of her life, the culmination or her greatest hopes and dreams—and she was spending it looking at the inner rim of our toilet bowl, which I just never quite manage to get clean enough. There was no maternal glow, no loving caress of our baby-to-be tucked safely in her womb. Just misery, exhaustion, and an endless sea of vomit.

With what little optimism we had left, we counted down the weeks and finally the days until the magical Week 12. This, rumor had it, was the week where things began to fall into place. Your risk of miscarriage dropped, your nausea passed, and the troublesome first trimester said it’s goodbyes. But, as I flipped ahead eagerly in our array of week-by-week baby books, I began to have the sneaking suspicion that Week 12 might not have fully earned it’s fame. It seemed that the end of the first trimester was actually a debatable dateline—some books slipped it back to the end of the thirteenth or even fourteen week. Others cautioned that morning sickness improved only for some moms, while others might continue to receive daily visits from Vomit-land for some months to come. I cautiously asked my sister when she’d began to feel better, and she cheerfully replied: “You know, I felt better the very moment Hanna was born, it was amazing!”

Well then.

Despite this news, we forged valiantly ahead with our Week 12 celebration plans. Or rather, I did. Cari’s planning at this point consisted primarily of planning the closest route to the toilet. I organized a day in the nearby Walnut Creek, where everything is shiny and clean, and shopping is the past time of choice. I planned to begin with our first maternity clothes shopping at the two-story Pea in the Pod/Motherhood Maternity super-store, followed by lunch at Cari’s favorite California Pizza Kitchen, and Push Present window shopping at Tiffany’s. An hour later we found ourselves stuck in an endless traffic jam in a completely full parking garage, Cari carrying a full ziplock bag of vomit, and me desperately searching for either a parking spot or a garbage can. The line at California Pizza Kitchen was over an hour, far too long for even a non-pregnant stomach to wait by the time we finally managed to find a parking spot, the rings at Tiffany’s cost more than a year of child care, and the clothes at Pea in the Pod were designed for an anorexic model wearing a fake pregnancy belly. The sales-clerk offered half-heartedly to run upstairs and bring down some “relaxed fit” items from the Motherhood Maternity selection, but it was clear from her wrinkled nose that we’d gotten off on the wrong foot the moment we walked in and asked if they had any plastic vomit bags handy.

Defeated, we make our way to McDonalds, choosing a winding path that left Cari with the most available options for trashcans and bushes to duck behind if need be.

We ate our French fries in silence, me seething that our baby was growing exclusively on the nutrients available in potatoes, while Cari, I’m sure, was furious that I’d insensitively dragged her on this poorly timed outing in the first place.

We floundered along like this for several more weeks, as the true end of our first trimester passed us by largely unnoticed, and entirely uncelebrated.

The turning point came in the form of a crescendo; the first melodic hits of laughter, rising up to greet one final soaring aria of anger.

In our seventeenth week of pregnancy, Cari declared all weekend plans were cancelled in favor of dedicating our full attention to the matter of her sluggish bowels, whom she had not heard from in over two weeks. Armed with several bottles of magnesium citrate at our doctor’s recommendation, and the determination that has been the defining characteristic of our four years of marriage, we tackled the matter head on. Cari valiantly consumed the foul-tasting bottle of artificial lime liquid over an hour of concerted effort. Just as she reached the final few ounces, she got the look. That familiar vomity look you hope you never know your partner well enough to recognize. There’s a down-turning of the corners of her mouth, and a glassiness to her eyes.

“Go to the bathroom!” I cried.

“I can’t, if I vomit I’ll have to drink it all again!”

I eyed her cautiously, the look passed, and then there it was: a sea of vomit, filling my favorite blanket that was strewn across her lap, a quilt my mother made me years ago from my high school cross-country t-shirts. In it’s midst sat my I-Phone, drowning slowly.

Having now completely exhausted all other options, what choice did we have but to laugh?

So laugh we did, breaking a dry spell unrivaled during the course of our relationship. There have been a dozen times when we’ve found ourselves up against a wall, uncertain of where to turn to next, but there are rarely times when we find ourselves unable to laugh about the unexpected curveballs that life has thrown our way. After weeks of talking almost exclusively about some variation of the functions of Cari’s digestive system, the sound of our own laughter grounded us, and we tackled the clean-up readily.

Miraculously, my I-Phone emerged unscathed. But by that evening Cari’s designated task of the day remained unaccomplished, and the total number of ounces of food or fluid she’d managed to successfully consume was nill.

We packed up and headed for the Kaiser hospital in Walnut Creek, a dry run of sorts for the trip we ultimately planned to make there to give birth. I eyed the clock as we left our house and again as we arrived, trying to imagine how those elapsed minutes would feel the day our baby was arriving. It seemed like some sort of imaginative play or wishful thinking, as we still struggled mightily to connect Cari’s current affliction to the eventual arrival of a baby.

The doctor there was stern and disapproving, and made no secret of the fact that he thought pregnancy was a condition women ought to bear more quietly than Cari currently was. He seemed equally confident that he himself would be able to handle it much better, and smug that he would never have to discover whether or not this was true.

Although his inclination was to give Cari a bag of fluids and then release her and hope for the best, she finally managed to convince him to order an enema. We expected this to be a horrific affair, but it was actually a rather tidy little procedure, the results of which were nearly immediate. Elated, Cari declared that we would name the baby after the nurse who had administered it. This seemed to irk the doctor a bit, for no matter how reluctant he had been to offer treatment, he now seemed eager to take credit for the cure. As a parting gift, he advised Cari that if her pre-natal vitamins stopped her up, she might consider stopping taking them.

The following morning it became clear that while I had interpreted this to mean stop taking them for a day or two, Cari had interpreted it to mean for a good long while, perhaps indefinitely. I was blind to her desperation, to the havoc that had been wreaked upon her body over the past seventeen weeks. Instead, all I could see was my rage over the fact that I could research the very best pre-natal vitamins to provide our baby with the nutrients it was lacking from Cari’s limited diet of Cheerios, potatoes and chicken nuggets; I could order a nine month’s supply and put them out in a prominent location that blocked her view of the TV at night, but if she decided not to take them, there wasn’t a damn thing I could do about it.

Suddenly I was face to face with every fear I’d ever had that this baby might be ours in name and theory, but hers in actuality. Her genes, her flesh and blood, her body giving birth. Her features on it’s face, her milk nourishing and sustaining its growth. The choices that impacted our baby’s future were entirely in her hands now, and who’s to say that would shift into equal balance later?

“Do whatever you want,” I said coldly, “you’re going to anyway. It’s your body, after all, isn’t that what you want to say?”

“I’m doing my best,” she replied, “you have to see that. You have no idea what it’s like for me.”

She left for work without another word, our usual morning ritual of me handing her her lunch, walking her to the door, and sending her off with a kiss hung in the air like an unanswered question.

Terror, inadequacy, a fierce protectiveness, and a complete sense of helplessness; over the course of the day my isolating anger slowly gave way to the sneaking suspicion that these were things that Cari was feeling too, even though it was her body where our baby was making it’s home. Perhaps even, these were things that every parent felt, no matter how their child came to be in their lives.

Cari came home from work that night and took her pre-natal vitamins, a peace offering of sorts. We sat face to face on the couch, turned towards each other for the first time after months of standing side-by-side, fighting off the next challenge. I shared with her my fears about being the other mother, about loving a baby that might never fully be my own.

“This baby is yours,” Cari said, rising to meet the question with the full determination, confidence and assurance that I so loved about her. “This is our baby.”

Moment’s later she was back in the bathroom, vomiting, and I was back in the kitchen, rushing to make a dinner that would cater to all of her food aversions while still giving our baby some nutrition. But still, we’d had it, that brief reprieve. That reminder of why we’d fallen in love in the first place, and why we’d ever begun to dream that out of our love, we’d dare to grow a child.

The Trying Trimester, Part 1: Flutter

When it finally came time to take the pregnancy test, my first thought was not any of the inspiring lyrics from “Soon Love, Soon,” but rather, It’s way too early in the morning to find out we aren’t pregnant again!” and then, “We really ought to be doing this on a weekend because now we have to be ready to make it through a full day at work after we get the bad news.”

 People who have just met Cari and I will sometimes mistake me for the optimist in our relationship. Perhaps this is because I can appear even-tempered and positive next to Cari’s passionate and sometimes hot-headed responses. But the truth is, I seem even-tempered because I’m a tried and true pessimist. Or at best, a realist. I tend to keep my expectations low, plan for the worst, and am pleasantly surprised when the worst gives way to something unexpectedly better.

 This is why, in the days before Cari peed on the little white stick, I was busy frantically creating plans and back up plans for where the next six month’s supply of sperm would come from now that we had used up all the vials we’d purchased. Cari, meanwhile, was busy yelling at me for giving up hope on the baby she was convinced she was already carrying.

 The moment itself nearly passed me by unnoticed. Cari dragged me out of bed at 4:55 am, urging me come to the bathroom with her so she could capture that essential first pee of the day before getting ready for work. In my groggy haze, I somehow missed her pulling out the stick. One minute I was busy trying to figure out if we should wait out the torturous 3 minutes looking at the stick or sequester ourselves outside of the bathroom, and the next I suddenly noticed that Cari was staring in fixed, unblinking concentration at something on the bathroom cupboard.

 “What, what is it?” I asked her, fearing the worst… perhaps a spider, or a seizure, or maybe even a combination of the two. “What are you looking at?” I demanded, louder.

 And like that, we were pregnant.

 The I-Phone photos we snapped of that moment show our faces puffy with early morning haze, and just beginning to master the particular blend of ecstasy, shock, disbelief and terror that would become the defining feature of the months that followed.

 From the moment we saw those two pink lines it was sudden onset neurosis. First came the OCD-like checking. We checked, double-checked, and triple-checked the two lines on the stick. I snapped pictures of it and checked those throughout the day. I simply could not believe that we were pregnant. This was the one outcome that my tried and true approach of preparing for the worst had left me ill prepared for. After months of trying to conceive you could hardly say that our pregnancy was a surprise. And yet, that’s exactly what it was. Unable to believe the existence of those two lines, I re-checked them when I got home that afternoon, and kept right on checking until the next neurosis set in.

 Cari and I have often said that Anxiety is the third person in our relationship. We have it in all three models- mine, hers, and ours- and all three showed up during the first few weeks of our pregnancy.  We rode the first wave of anxiety together, equally convinced that the pregnancy wouldn’t stick.

 When you get pregnant through the infertility department, they treat the early part of your pregnancy as well, even if your infertility is the kind that is defined solely by the absence of regular access to sperm. For us, this meant Cari had to have her blood drawn every three days to confirm that we were Still Pregnant. Actually, technically, it was to confirm that her HCG levels were doubling on schedule, but for us each test result carried the full weight of Still Pregnant or Not Pregnant Anymore.

 You see, most of our friends who have been down the two-mom fertility road have experienced at least one miscarriage, and we were not about to start assuming we were the exception, only to be caught unaware. It’s not that the rate of miscarriage is actually higher in our community; it’s just that we have to be so intentional about the whole business that we’re often keenly aware of a pregnancy long before a straight couple who wasn’t trying every would be. That, and we’re probably a lot more likely to talk to each other about it, since we need the sage wisdom of those who have gone before us to even stand a chance of successfully navigating the complicated process.

 So given all of this, we somehow arrived at the misconception that worrying about losing our baby would be the same thing as preventing it. Lesson number one of pregnancy: You have absolutely no control over anything that happens from here on out.

 Yes, this could have been a lesson learned during the roller coaster of conception, but for me, it wasn’t. I managed to emerge from that process feeling magically powerful over the whole business. It was, after all, the month after I implemented my own special fertility regimen that we successfully conceived. I read everything I could on the topic and put Cari on a strict routine of a nightly bucket-sized cup of fertility tea I blended myself, snuck flax seed into everything from pancakes to stir fry, and developed a dozen new ways to prepare Kale. I had her licking liquid Vitamin D drops of the back of her hand, and swallowing a small army of overpriced food-based prenatal vitamins and omega-3 tablets. The result? When our positive pregnancy test came back I felt more confident that I had impregnated her based on these measures than I did based on the fact that I had actually pushed the plunger on the insemination syringe.

 Unfortunately, the confidence didn’t last.

 After we finally finished the 3-day cycle of having her blood drawn, waiting for the results to come back, and receiving an arbitrary HCG number only to begin waiting again, like a 28-day cycle in microcosm, we moved on to anxiously awaiting our first ultrasound.

 By that time my work life had been reduced to a series of Google searches: What is the normal range of HCG levels at 5 weeks and 4 days pregnant? What is the rate of miscarriage at 4 weeks? 5 weeks? 6 weeks? If a pregnant woman’s HCG levels triple, does that mean she is having twins? If my HCG levels don’t double, does that increase her risk of miscarriage? What are the odds of having multiples when conceiving on Clomid?

 Seven weeks and two days into our pregnancy, we arrived at Kaiser for our confirmation ultrasound. I knew the odds of finding no heartbeat, a visible heartbeat, or a both visible and audible heartbeat, and how each of these outcomes would impact our odds of miscarriage from here on out. Cari knew that her ever-present exhaustion was starting to give way to all-consuming waves of nausea, and that she didn’t have the energy to think about much else.  I don’t think either of us knew what to expect when that first image of our child projected on the screen.

 Nurse Beasely walked into the room and greeted us calmly, as though it was the most expectable thing in the world that our monthly visits to her would have resulted in this strangely terrifying miracle. As I stood to hold Cari’s hand while Nurse Beasely moved the ultrasound wand into place, the blood rushed from my head, my legs threatened to collapse, and I had the sinking suspicion that if I was this useless at our first ultrasound, I would be a complete bust at our baby’s actual birth.

 But I managed to retain consciousness, and there up on the screen was our little one, having grown from a poppy seed to a blueberry in the short time that we’d know . Now, looking for all the world like it was well on it’s way to becoming… well, a kidney bean at best, since it certainly didn’t resemble a baby, but a kidney bean with a fluttering little heart! Nurse Beasely used the keypad to zero in on the flutter, and the room was filled with the sound of a galloping horse, our baby’s heartbeat, both audible and visible.

 That first fear abated, we moved onto the next. We insisted Nurse Beasely double, triple check for other little beating hearts. We’d had at least four potentially viable eggs the month we conceived, and were equally as afraid that there were be three or more beating hearts as we were that there would be none.

 Lesson number two of pregnancy: If you are always looking forward to the next milestone to ease your fears, instead of inward to yourself, you’ll be afraid for a very long time.

 After Nurse Beasely verified the little bean was alone in Cari’s womb, she briskly asked us what ob-gyn we would like to see for our first pre-natal appointment.

 “But what about you?” Cari asked, “When will we see you again?”

 “This is it,” Nurse Beasely replied, not unkindly, “my work here is done.”

 Moments later we were standing on Piedmont Ave, booted out of the Infertility Specialty Clinic and into the land of the really, truly pregnant.

 We stared at each other in disbelief, then, and in the nearly silent hours that followed, as we tried to wrap our minds around the blob projected on the screen, lop-sided with a galloping racehorse heart, who would soon become our own very little person with a big, big role in our lives.

 It didn’t feel at all like I thought it would. Yes, excitement bloomed from the tight knots in my stomach, and love swelled in my overwhelmed heart, but mostly there was just terror, tingling from my fingertips to my toes.

 Lesson number three of pregnancy: sometimes getting exactly what you wanted is much, much harder than you ever thought it would be.

Hope-Missile

Once you are in the rotating two-week cycle of trying to get pregnant, realizing you aren’t, and trying again for several months, you start to embody this strange breed of despair/hope. For us, the hope usually began its steady take-over of our lives just as we took into our possession the exalted sperm. For those of you who don’t know, the teeny-tiny vials of goods come encapsulated in a hulking metal tank. It is icy-cold to the touch and closely resembls a giant missile you might expect to find on a field during a World War II reenactment. For those of you who don’t know, thanks. I’m glad you don’t. That’s one less person we have to worry about catching site of the tank while we are lugging it down the street and knowing exactly what we’re up to.

This last cycle we did our gosh-darn best to get off on the right foot with our little hope missile. We made the hour trek to the sperm bank together, carried the tank to the car swinging gently between us, lovingly strapped it into the backseat of the car, and then covered it with a nest of coats and sweatshirts to prevent it from getting too much sun exposure. Then, we went on our only date that month, given our conflicting work schedules, seemingly endless series of doctor’s appointments, and the high percentage of our disposable income that went to purchase the vials.

Adjacent to our sperm bank is a fancy restaurant I’d always eyed curiously during my rushed trips to the bank between clients, and this time we splurged. We ordered decadent plates of steaming butternut squash soup and crab-melts piled high with the seafood Cari would soon have to swear-off if everything went as planned. Our air was celebratory, giddy even, and the waiter caught our enthusiasm, sneaking us glass after glass of raspberry lemonade despite the restaurant’s strict policy against free refills. When we got home that afternoon we tucked the tank into the back of our bedroom closest and sent it the very best energy and intentions we could muster. “Welcome home, little guy”, we told it fondly, “we hope you decide to stick around.”

A few days later, after our usual series of panicked phone calls to the sperm bank—Cari’s ovulation cycle was running late, did they think the dry ice would hold? Did we need to come back for a bigger tank? Was that zip tie supposed to be on our tank of had it been tampered with?—we were finally in the doctor’s office waiting room. It’s a narrow, congested space filled with little love seats large enough to hold two petite adults shoved shoulder to shoulder. If we weren’t lucky enough to find an empty love seat, I knew we’d be stuck again pressed up against someone’s husband, politely trying to pretend we didn’t know from our Kaiser fertility orientation that he had a vial of fresh sperm stuffed under his armpit to try and keep it at body temperature.

But lucky we were… it was a slow morning in ovulation land, and the nurses called us back before we’d even settled fully into a position that struck what I hoped was the appropriate balance between maternal affection for the cold metal tank that held the beginning of what could one day before our firstborn child, and the objective detachment that would allow us to embark upon this journey yet again if this wasn’t our month.

We were greeted in the examination room by Nurse Beasley, a sturdy, unsmiling woman who had accompanied us during each of our previous rounds of insemination. She had the air of someone who had done this a thousand times before, and each time her stern yet kind expression seemed to be trying to remind us that the odds weren’t in our favor, but we’d still eventually get where we were trying to go.

“Would you like to keep the vial?” she asked, pulling it from it’s little pot of steaming water with what looked like a petite Easter egg dipper. “Yes!” we replied unanimously. We’d declined the first few times, as it seemed to be the silly, sentimental stuff of hippies, but our distain had quickly faded. We’d take what we could get these days. The procedure itself took under a minute, anticlimactic in how poorly its ease of execution matched its significance for our future.

Our sperm were off and running, and we were finally alone in the room. I crawled onto the narrow bed where Cari had been instructed to lay, right ovary down, for at least 20 minutes. I splayed my hand across where I imagined her ovary would be and urged them on, towards the warmth of my hand. “Come on little guys, you can do it!”

With Cari’s I-phone tucked between us, I began to play the soundtrack of our first few months of dating. The songs were Ethereal, piano-driven melodies reminiscent of our first date and the seemingly endless series of late nights and long, lazy mornings that followed. The music filled our examination room and most likely the rest of the doctor’s office, and I imagine practical Nurse Beasley, whose office shared a wall with our room, shook her head in only mildly disapproving bemusement. “Soon, love, soon…” Vienna Teng’s voice promised,

Soon, love, soon                                                                                                               Soon, love, soon

There’ll be a fire burning in the temple of our peace
(Soon love soon)
There’ll be the soaring voice for a silent plea
(Soon love soon)
We will hold a broken circle and begin to pray
(Soon love soon)
We will find a black and white in the grey

And we will be as one god
And we will be as one people
And we will be as one god
And we will be as one people

(Soon love soon)
We will find illumination in unnatural light
(Soon love soon)
You will travel a thousand miles without leaving my sight
(Soon love soon)
We will find we never knew hatred ran so deep
(Soon love soon)
Such a wide, wide chasm of faith to leap

But we will be as one god
And we will be as one people
And we will be as one god
And we will be as one people
Yes we will be as one god
And we will be as one people

(Soon love soon)
There’ll be an evolution of the human soul
(Soon love soon)
We will know that to be a part is to be truly whole
(Soon love soon)
We will know the pattern of centuries’ rise and fall
(Soon love soon)
We will know that the fate of one is the fate of all

And we will be as one god
And we will be as one people

Through the years this song had been many things- a promise of our future together, a plea for a more peaceful future for the world, the closest we could come to praying. Now, we sent it up as all three- a promise, a plea, and a prayer that soon, love, soon, our baby would find its way to us.

Now Accepting Donations

Sperm. During the first 26 years of my life, I gave it hardly any thought at all. There was this one recurring nightmare I had after our best guy friends house-sat for us where their sperm managed somehow to live on in our bed and sneak into my PJ’s to impregnate me. There was also this incident where I found a splatter of thick, creamy substance on my car after my yoga class one night and spent a week wondering if it was someone’s sperm. But apart from that, nothing. It barely registered in my consciousness as having any relevance to my existence for most of my life, and then, suddenly, it was everything.

Ok, actually, it wasn’t all that suddenly- Cari has been talking about having a baby since the day I met her. We met at a coffee shop, moved on to lunch, and then met up at the dog park later that afternoon where I walked up to her cradling Rylee, her puppy, in a newborn position and said jokingly, “You look like you need a baby.”

“I do,” she replied, bending down to plant a kiss on Rylee’s scruffy head, “I’m thinking of having one on my own…I’m tired of waiting!”

But wait she did, for four more years, while I slowly, budgingly, got on board with the plan. So while in retrospect sperm’s entrance into my life wasn’t all that sudden really, it certainly felt that way at the time.

There is this period of time during the lesbian conception process when sperm plays the starring role, makes up the ensemble cast, and even seems to direct the show. For us, the auditions lasted several months.

Each evening we’d pour over the sperm bank’s website, looking for our perfect match. We wanted someone who was a balanced blend of our physical features so that both of us could carry his babies and still have the children resemble the non-bio mom. Cari has pale, almost translucent skin that burns but never tans, reddish-blond hair, green eyes, and an angular face. I have dark brown hair, even darker brown eyes, light olive skin that tans deeply, and an oval face with a broad jaw. There is no notable combination of these features.

We are both mutts, but without any overlap. Cari has English and Irish ancestry, while I am Swedish, German, and Cherokee. Our search to find a donor who matched both of our heritages turned up a fair number of candidates, but somehow they all managed to have essays that were deeply concerning from a psychological standpoint. One, when asked to describe his relationships with his family, wrote: “My mother taught me how to copy human emotion.” Not your typical response to a question like this, and in our heightened state of anxiety, this struck us as more than a little predictive of some kind of psychopath/serial killer who might fit in better on Dexter than in our home.

We also quickly learned that the sperm bank’s distinctive feature, “Celebrity Look-Alikes,” which offers a link to Internet photos of celebrities whom each candidate resembles, was less than helpful. Most of the celebrities looked either hung over and drug addicted or aloof and unapproachable with their chiseled, perfect features. It was hard to imagine raising someone who looked like any one of them.

Once we purchased the pricey “90-day all-access pass,” which allowed us to download everything from baby pictures to “creative expression” pieces from each of the candidates, we were faced with a whole slew of new problems. Take, for example, their childhood photos. Was that stiff posture and averted gaze we noticed in several candidates indicative of Aspergers? Why, of out all their pictures, would they choose one where they were dirty and tear-streaked?

Finally, we narrowed it down to two promising candidates. A music teacher we selected based on the fact that his writing style in the donor essays reminded Cari a lot of mine, and a PhD in electrical engineering whose impressive credentials of nearly perfect SAT and GRE scores, athletic prowess, and a penchant for adventure sports seemed too good to pass up. After agonizing over the decision for several weeks, we finally called Cari’s step-dad Chappy, a retired army chaplain, for some spiritual guidance. He recommended we put out the extra cash for access to the donor’s audio downloads.

That evening Cari sat in our tiny condo’s bathtub and I sat on the bathroom floor next to her, a set of headphones strung between us. We expected that upon hearing their voices, we would suddenly know which one was The One; that the heavens would part and reveal we had found the person who would contribute half of the DNA for our children-to-be. Instead, it felt like being a fly on the wall during a really bad first date. The sperm bank employee haltingly yet flirtatiously led each candidate through a series of getting to know you questions. By the end of the interviews, we realized that what we had mistaken for an intentionally self-deprecating, humorous, good-naturedly sarcastic tone in the Music Teacher’s writing was actually a socially awkward, self-indulgent pessimism. Less than half-way through the PhD’s interview, we began to realize that to finish your doctorate while managing to master the Argentine tango, teach Martial Arts to kids, surf, snowboard, and train to vlimb Mt. Everest requires a certain level of drive so intense, so focused by nature that when combined with our own anxious, achievement-driven temperaments could be disastrous.

What we needed was someone who used their intelligence to increase their happiness rather than their accomplishments. What we needed was a slacker.

We spent the next several weeks on hiatus from the sperm bank’s website, eying instead the trio of close guy friends we had long ago identified as potential known donors, but ruled out primarily on the basis of how much we liked them and how little we relished having a conversation with them where we popped the big question and risked their polite refusal. We strategized ways to set them up in order to request the goods. Casual lunches, wine-filled afternoons, quick phone calls… no setting seemed quite right to say: “hey, I’d like you to father our baby but absolutely under no circumstances do we want you to be like a father to our baby.”

Yes, men get women pregnant all the time, and yes, a lot of them feel perfectly fine about parting ways afterwards and never looking back, but that wasn’t the kind of men these men were. And even if they were fine with not being parents to their sperm’s production now, how could we ask them to know how they would feel in, 5, 10, or even 15 years? Finally, we feared that if one of them did become the donor, we would be so busy setting up boundaries to make it clear they weren’t the parent that we would miss out on having them be uncles to our children, which we hoped for these three men more than anything.

It was back to the sperm bank, then, where anonymity protected us and the donors from any changes of heart for the first 18 years, at which point our children would be able to contact them once in accordance with the donor’s “willing to be known” contract. Most kids don’t want anything to do with their parents at that age anyway, so I knew that even if our kids did want to find their donor at 18 and idealize them for all the ways they weren’t like us, it would be easier not to take it quite so personally.

Our return to the vortex of the sperm bank’s search engine turned up only one promising new candidate: a young man we fondly came to know as “Shorty.” Several inches shorter than the sperm bank’s stated minimum height requirement, Cari took this as a sign that if we had a son, he might face rejection from her extended family, whose love of boys playing basketball is surpassed only by their love of Jesus. I, however, took it as a sign that there must have been something special about him to make it through the sperm bank’s rigorous screening process despite his height.

The son of a diplomat and an engineer, he works as a substitute teacher every other year to save up money and then spends the alternate years hopping trains across the country or couch surfing in Europe. It’s clear he was the kind of kid whose unwavering pursuit of his own dreams and ideas probably drove his parents crazy. But in response to a question about who he would like to have dinner with if he could have dinner with anyone from any place in any time in history, he said he’d like to have dinner with the friends he is meeting up with tonight.

In the end I got to choose, because I will be the one whose genetic input into our baby is limited to the selection of our donor, and I picked him.

I picked him because the values we have in common are things I identify with more than my Swedish heritage, tall frame, or Cherokee nose. Happiness, contentment, wonder, and a sense of connection to the beauty of world and all the people in it—who knows if those kinds of things are genetic, but I want to give our kid their very best shot.