She may be 21, but she’s still my baby
Sue Clark
Twenty-one years ago last week, I was wearing the only outfit I could
still get into at nine months pregnant. If you noticed an irritated
35-year-old woman wearing a big maroon sweater over stretchy-front
bell-bottoms, then you saw me. I had taken to stomping clumsily along
Coast Highway and heading up Dover Street in an effort to get my
daughter born. She was 10 days late, and I was counting.
(Interestingly, this would turn out to be a girl who took charge
of her own alarm clock and told me never to wake her up for school. I
would hover anxiously by her door on school mornings, but she got up
every time, darting me an irritated look if she caught me standing
there).
But I digress. After much futile stomping, some equally useless
hopping up and down on the advice of friends, and some grumpy
gardening and lawn mowing, I was convinced I would remain a purple
and navy blimp for all time.
However, the night of Jan. 4, 1983, I had lots of bad dreams, all
of them involving labor. I awoke and still seemed to be involved in
my dreams. I grabbed my husband’s watch and waited. Ouch. Why was my
back cramping up? Eight minutes later: Ouch! Seven minutes later:
OUCH!
I woke up my husband and told him I might be in labor.
“No, you’re not,” he mumbled and went back to sleep.
I woke him up again, seven minutes later, and soon we were off to
the hospital. Although I never really looked that pregnant, being
long and lanky, my slenderness was deceptive. Apparently, I had wide
bones where it counted. I had a four-hour labor, just like an
old-fashioned mountain woman.
I called my daughter at college this Jan. 5 at 12:38 p.m.
“Hi, mom,” she answered before I spoke. “I know, 21 years ago I
was born at 12:38.”
“Happy birthday, honey. And what two things did I ask for right
after you were born?”
“A Coke. Was it diet or regular?”
“Regular; I wanted sugar and I was caffeine-deprived.”
“And, um ... oh, yes, a toothbrush to brush your teeth.”
I was pleased she remembered a little of the family culture.
“And you got stoned on the pain medication?’
I attempted to divert her from this avenue of questioning.
“You know I had a natural childbirth except for a tranquilizer
during the worst part,” I said.
“You mean when you told dad he could take the breathing techniques
and ... “
“Yes, yes. I got a little testy during transition.” (Transition is
the worst part of labor. As the nurses said, I had a lot of
“discomfort.”)
“He told me you almost broke his hand,” she said.
“I might have squeezed it a bit. And, yes; they gave me some
Demerol for pain after labor,” I said. “You know the rest. I tell you
every year. One of the nurses came in and I asked her why she was
floating a foot off the ground.”
“And they changed your meds.”
“That they did.”
She told me about some plans she had for some birthday parties
that week. Just like her dad, she seems to have a birthday week --
not just one day. And I nagged at her to be careful, as always.
“When you were little, I thought when you turned 18, I’d stop
worrying about you.”
“Ha!” she said, and I had to agree.
“But, you know what? In spite of all the worries, you turned out
great.”
“Love you, mom.”
“Happy birthday, Laura. You were worth the wait.”
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