Here’s the story… all in one place. From my own personal perspective. (As it is the only perspective I’ve
got.) (And it is so seductively dominant
it smothers my ability to write from any other
perspective.)
It began last Father’s Day. I had been angling for an electric razor, hinting,
annoyingly frequently, “I’d like an electric razor for Father’s Day.” No beating around the bush. Otherwise, I’d wind up with socks.
Father’s Day arrives.
We have a family gathering in our basement. Before we eat, Anna insists we all assemble
on the couch so she can present me with my Father’s Day present. (I wonder what it is.)
She instructs me to read the card first. Turns out, it’s a multi-pager.
The first page says,
“”Happy Father’s
Day!!! We got you an electric razor which
wasn’t a surprise at all (since you asked for it several times), but we thought
father’s day isn’t complete without a surprise…
I flip to the second page, which reads,
“This page is for
suspence (sic).”
I then curiously turn to the third page, which stunningly
announces:
“We’re having a baby!!”
On the bottom of that page is a sonogram of the blessed Baby
Girl in utero.
Including her projected “Due Date”:
January 20th,
2018.
FLASH FORWARD: SEVEN-AND-A-HALF MONTHS LABOR – HA – I MEAN
LATER.”
SATURDAY DECEMBER 2nd, 2017.
The awaited Baby Girl in
utero is not due for another seven weeks.
With time to spare, I head off to Rancho
La Puerta, because my pants don’t fit, except for my Levi’s “Stretchy Jeans”, and even they’re going, “We are not miracle
workers!” I am scheduled for a trip
to Toronto the following week and, being winter, I felt it unwise to show up
there without pants. I wisely went to
the Ranch to drop a few. Pounds, not pantalones.
TUESDAY DECEMBER 5th, 2017.
I get a call from Los Angeles. Anna’s just had a sonogram. The seven-month
Baby Girl in utero,
although otherwise healthy, is experiencing nourishment difficulties. As a result, the projected “delivery” has
been advanced from January 20th 2018 to sometime before New
Year’s. The six-and-change-week “Due
Date” has now contracted (to pun intended, honest)
to three.
Cause for worry, but not serious concern. (Although the two feel anxiously
interchangeable.)
FRIDAY DECEMBER 8th
2017.
The evening before I am to return home, I receive another phone call, informing me that
Anna is now in the hospital. A follow-up
precautionary sonogram prescribes “round-the-clock” monitored surveillance.
Barring further unexpectednesses, the baby girl is now
scheduled to arrive in two days.
I feel like I am selfishly in the wrong place. A once seven-week “Due Date” has shrunk to
“The day after tomorrow.” And I’m having fun at the Ranch.
SATURDAY DECEMBER 9th,
2017.
I am departing Rancho
La Puerta, somewhat wobbly, and vulnerably alone. The sacred mountain’s invisible Mariachi band
bolster my spirits with me a stirring, encouraging composition:
“She’s on her way!
They’re gonna have a little baby
They’re gonna call her Golda, maybe…”
I am determined to remain positive. But being me, the darker alternate lyric,
“She’s gone away…”
looms shatteringly on the periphery.
I get home. I quickly
jettison my luggage and head immediately for the hospital. The medical staff seems upbeat. I am not certain if they actually are or it’s how they are taught to be in medical school. I put on a “brave” face. But despite my most determined efforts, the
face beneath it occasionally breaks through.
Sunday December 10th,
2017.
We come back the next morning. The procedure – a “C-section” – takes
achingly longer than we were told it
would take.
May I stop for a Steven Wright joke?
Thank you.
“I was ‘Caesarian’
born. Can’t really tell, although
whenever I leave a house, I go out through the window.”
The baby finally arrives.
Healthy. And fully functioning.
Though weighing 3 pounds, fifteen ounces.
You can buy lobsters bigger than that.
Anna and Baby Girl “Preemie” remain in the hospital. I depart for Toronto. I come back with a cold. (Later diagnosed as a virus and a bacterial infection. I do not know how anyone in Canada is still
alive.)
Awaiting their new house to be completed, Anna and Colby and
the growing (surging to five pounds) Baby Girl “Preemie” are staying with us. Harboring lingering symptoms of my illnesses,
when visiting her room, I am instructed to don a protective mask, and keep my
distance from my new granddaughter.
A highly disorienting week.
Which seems to have turned out okay.
The preceding narrative is a thumbnail summary of recent
events, for those who inquired about it.
And also those who did not. (A
recent addition to the family has not exonerated me from “the spectrum.”)
And now, it is with bursting enthusiasm that I introduce to
you, and to the world…
Golda Lee Buddelmeyer.
“She’s here to stay!
Oh what a lovely little baby
They’re gonna let me hold her, maybe
Hip, hip, hooray.”
Mazel tov! And welcome to Golda.
ReplyDeleteLove those chubby cheeks.
Welcome to this fascinating world, Golda.
ReplyDeleteWe have been heaven blessed
I can't believe what God has done
Through us he's given life to one
But isn't she lovely made from love
Isn't she lovely Stevie Wonder
Yes, she is! Congratulations.
congrats. Glad she made it through safely.
ReplyDeletewg
Well done Grandpa!
ReplyDeleteIs BuddelMEYER pronounced similarly to Gilda MEIR?
ReplyDeleteCONGRATS to all!
Yes I know it's Golda, but spell-check snuck one by me.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful baby. Congratulations. Grandchildren help balance the old age ledger.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear that everything turned out O.K. for little Golda. By the way, this is my first visit to your blog. Are they all this intense? I'm a regular reader of Ken Levine's blog. He suggested that "everyone" should read your blog. So, I thought I should check it out. I'll probably be back.
ReplyDelete