Posts Tagged fatherhood

I’m being selfishly manipulated, and I love it

One of the many things you can never be adequately prepared for as a father is just how much unfeasibly cute behaviour your sprog comes pre-programmed with. To describe the recent assault that Tom has mounted on my Victorian Fatherly Reserve as a “charm offensive” would be like describing the D-Day landings as “a bit of a scuffle”.

Jane’s been reading a Proper Science Book about it. Apparently researchers have found that babies “flirt” just like adults. Before you start imagining any unpleasantness, it’s not that kind of flirting, it just uses the same techniques. Tom will catch my eye, flash me a huge grin, and then shyly look away. If he had a fan to hide behind he’d no-doubt flap it coquettishly, but he doesn’t need it. I’m already lolloping over like Pavlov’s dog at a campanology demonstation to give him the extra attention he requires, and maybe get rewarded a few more big smiles.

Oh the smiles! Nothing prepares you for the smiles! Recently he’s decided that the simple broad grin isn’t sufficently cheery, so he’s moved on to a huge open-mouthed raptuous happy-face. In fact, he’s the only person I know who can truly do the :D smiley justice.

Something about that smile zaps straight into the pleasure centres of your brain. Your heart jumps into your throat, and you blurt out a laugh without even realising it. Positive feedback ensues, each participant feeding off the other’s unalloyed pleasure. Baby gets rewarded with five minutes of undivided attention and you get rewarded with a milky-sick-stained shirt… but a freshly laundered soul.

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Dad Things

When you become a dad, it seems, you start doing Dad Things.

I’m not sure what triggers it. It’s not related to age; I didn’t become a dad until my late thirties, so the Dad Things didn’t kick in until fairly recently, but guys who become fathers in their twenties or earlier start displaying dad traits much sooner.

It’s also not related to the presence of the child itself. I’m not talking about building go-karts or oiling bike chains, I’m talking about things that dads do that don’t require the presence of a child at all. You can do all these things without being a dad, it just that people tend not to.

Some examples:

Eating dull cereal
I used to enjoy a crunchy nut cornflake or two, a hearty bowl of fruit and fibre, maybe some Cheerios when I was feeling extravagant.

These are not Dad Cereals. Dads take perverse pleasure in eating as dull and worthy a breakfast cereal as possible. The moment I became a father I began to shun the frivilous end of the cereal aisle and hanker for good old cornflakes with a bit of milk. Even All Bran is looking a bit la-di-dah for me these days. By next year I think I’ll be eating a cereal that looks and tastes somewhat like the wood chips you buy in garden centres.

Sucking on lemons
Jane pointed this one out to me. I’d reached the bottom of a glass of coke, fished out the slice of lemon and began sucking on it and pulling faces.

“My dad used to do that!” she said, and we realised it was another Dad Thing. Actually, the proper Dad Thing is sucking on a lemon slice and pretending to like it, but I’m not quite at that stage yet. Perhaps this dad gene is expressed early to give the father time to master the skill by the time their offspring is old enough to appreciate it.

(This is another important aspect of all Dad Things, although they don’t require the presence of your progeny, they’re only really satisfying when performed in front of them.)

Making stuff up
It’s a dad’s duty to fill his children’s brains with endless misinformation, to prepare them for a lifetime of being lied to by everyone else. When they reach an age where they triumphantly cry “no it isn’t Daddy!” to some patent nonsense you’ve just spouted, you can feel satisfied of a job well done.

Actually Jane will probably argue that I’ve always been good at making stuff up, but the presence of Tom has kicked this part of my personality into overdrive. I spent a good half hour last night telling my son how cushions like the one he was propped up on were hunted and culled in glacial Iceland.

I can’t wait until he actually understands what I’m saying so I can start telling him some real whoppers.

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The best laid birth plans

“I’ll almost certainly be a dad my tomorrow night,” I said.

You’d think I’d have learnt my lesson, wouldn’t you?

Thomas didn’t actually turn up until lunchtime on the day after that; and it had been, I can honestly say, a very long night.

Jane started the process of being induced on the Thursday morning. The drug they gave her didn’t do the trick, so she had to be put on a hormone drip in the evening. As this meant a night being constantly hooked up to machines and monitors, it basically threw out of the window any chance of the water birth that Jane would have liked. But, all along our guiding plan had been “whatever’s best for the baby”.

They encourage you these days to write a “birth plan” to tell the people involved how you’d like things to go. To my mind they’re pretty pointless, though. Either things are going swimmingly, in which case the mum’s in a position to dictate exactly how things should go without recourse to a written sheet, or there are complications, and it depends very much on what the complications are as to how they should be tackled.

Jane had an idea of a pre-printed flowchart that would allow you to describe what you wanted to happen in each eventuality, but as our midwife explained, there are so many eventualities that the flow chart would end up looking like a sea urchin trying to knit a map of the Underground. The flowchart, basically, is in the midwives’ heads, in the form of years of training and experience. The best birth plan is to say to the midwife “I want a healthy baby, and if at all possible a healthy mum too, what can YOU do to make that happen?”

Which is what we did, once things started departing from the script.

Jane was taken from the maternity ward to the delivery suite. Top tip: if you come into hospital to have a baby, never unpack your bags until the baby actually turns up. It’s not like a hotel, and the bed they give you when you check in isn’t yours until you check out. Half an hour after we arrived in the suite, the bags we’d left in the maternity ward arrived, all packed up again. Except whereas Jane had packed them with a sense of order, the nurses had packed them with merely a sense of urgency.

The contractions soon became so intense that Jane was in a great deal of pain, and although the gas and air was making her the life and soul of the party, it wasn’t helping with the pain itself. Jane asked for an epidural. She knew she was in for a marathon night, and didn’t want to greet the baby after hours of agony. I didn’t either.

The long night began. The hormone and epidural drips started to do their jobs. All we could do was wait, and try to sleep.

The steady thumping of the baby’s heartbeat was as gently lulling as a train slowly clacking over tracks, and equally disturbing when it suddenly stopped. The foetal heart monitor occasionally lost the signal, and while we knew this was because the baby had shifted inside, it was still worrying enough to jar me out of sleep each time.

Add to that the regular monitoring to measure Jane’s pulse, blood pressure, temperature, level of “block” (basically how far up her legs the epidural was working, measured by how hot a bag of ice felt at various points) and level of dilation; sleep was out of the question. It all became a rather surreal experience. Strangely, I kept having to remind myself why I was there, what the point of it all was.

I wandered the corridors of the hospital, which I know well from my day job but seemed strange and alien at night. For example, the staff-only canteen area (where I stopped for a cheaper bottle of coke) had changed from a light and convivial coffee lounge to a dark dormitory with the shadowy bodies of overworked junior doctors snoring on the couches.

By the morning Jane had dilated enough to enter the next stage: pushing.

The epidural meant that she wasn’t going to feel the pain so much, but it also meant she wouldn’t be getting the uncontrollable urge to push. The midwife explained that she’d have to learn to push.

She soon got the hang of it. Timed with each contraction, she began to push.

And push. For two hours.

The baby, despite Jane’s new-found skills, was refusing to move much. He “turned a corner”, according to the midwife, but he still had a long way to go.

Jane was exhausted and in a lot of pain, despite the epidural. An anaesthetist was sent for, and arrived full of the cocksure bravado that seems to be an essential personality trait for that career.

“So I hear that this baby is coming out of the sunroof?” he asked, smiling.

“Not necessarily!” said the midwife. But it felt like an unspoken truth had finally been said.

While the anaesthetist busied himself with the epidural drip, the surgeon arrived and had a brief feel around.

“I’m sorry, this baby isn’t coming out by itself. We need you to sign a release for a caesarian.”

Jane couldn’t sign fast enough.

Things suddenly got incredibly busy. I was sent to put on theatre blues and joined Jane under a tent in the operating theatre, the business end hidden from us both. A crowd of attendants concentrated on preparing things while the anaesthetist explained that if his knock-out juice had worked properly, Jane would feel nothing more than a sensation that someone was “doing the washing up” in her innards. If it hadn’t worked, then it might be a lot more painful and they’d have to knock her out.

Jane reported a pain like someone pressing hard on her pelvic bone. The local anaesthetic hadn’t worked. It was time for a general anaesthetic to put her under while the sunroof was opened. As my only job in the theatre was keeping Jane happy, I was surplus to requirements.

I was ushered back into the empty delivery room where we’d spent the night.

24 hours of tension, a sleepless night, worry, panic and stale adrenalin suddenly rolled over me, and my stiff upper lip deserted me somewhat. I noticed one thing through the tears: as we weren’t going to be using the room any more, someone had hastily packed our bloody bags again.

I sobbed. I knew things were going to be all right. Jane was in safe hands, the baby was healthy, he just needed to get out. Things were going to be okay, I told myself. I just didn’t want to listen.

I made a couple of calls to both grandmothers to let them know what was going on, which calmed me down a lot. After I hung up, there was a knock on the door. It was the midwife, with my son.

My beautiful, perfect son.

I held him in my arms and he opened his crystal clear eyes and looked, fleetingly, into mine. I’ll never forget that moment.

An hour of bonding later and we were reunited with mum, and for the first time ever, we were a family.

I love it when a plan comes together.

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The last day

When someone has a baby in the movies, it’s a pretty hasty affair. The waters break, they have a few contractions, they push and breathe in short puffs for a bit (often in the back of taxi), and then a baby pops out, looking curiously clean and about 3 months old.

What they don’t tell you is that it’s all a load of bollocks. Jane’s waters broke about yesterday lunchtime, and she didn’t even twig. It wasn’t until about 23:30 that she returned from the bathroom saying “we need to go to the hospital”. I’ll spare you the gory details as to why we knew her waters had broken, suffice to say it would have all been decided a lot sooner if I’d have had a set of Pantone colour swatches for comparison purposes.

Very early this morning, the hospital confirmed that the waters had broken. So, I thought, the baby comes now, yeah?

No, apparently not. We got sent home with a explanatory leaftlet (it’s very hard to leave a hospital without an explanatory leaflet) and told to come back in two days, if the baby hadn’t decided to turn up of it’s own accord.

So, whatever happens, I’ll almost certainly be a dad by tomorrow night.

I think that fact will sink in in about… ten years.

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Pre-birth ennui

People will probably tell me to treasure this time; but I hate it.

People say “get all the sleep you can”. I’m not sure how that works. Can you store sleep in some kind of central reserve and call on it at a later date? If so, can I have some of the sleep I deposited as a teenager?

In another way, if life, work and common decency allowed it, I could happily lie in bed and sleep until the baby gets here. At least I’d feel committed to something.

I’m useless at the moment. I can’t engage at work, and feel a bit of a spare part at home now that more-or-less everything that needs to be done has been done. There’s a sort of end-of-term feel, but the teachers won’t tell anyone when the last day actually is.

Which is a shame, because I wanted to bring in a toy.

I just want this bit to be over so we can get on with the next bit.

I know I’m probably going to regret saying that.

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How to be a prospective father

Note that this advice relates purely to being a prospective father, not an actual father. I have no idea how to be an actual father. This relates to point 1.

Point 1: Worry endlessly that you’re not going to be a good father.

We’re mostly born into this life with a father, and if we’re lucky we get to keep him for quite some time. At first we assume that Dad knows everything, or at least, if he doesn’t know it immediately, he can go and look it up in a special book he keeps hidden called “Everything you’ll Ever Need to Know Ever” (Chapter One – How to bleed radiators).

Part of the whole horrible experience of growing up is the slow realisation that your Dad doesn’t know everything, is making most of it up as he goes along, and what’s more there is no book.

But, the thing is, even without a book my Dad did pretty well. He knew how to bleed radiators. He knew how to Do Things With Cars. He even once, during a traffic jam caused by a faulty traffic light, got out of the car, sauntered up to the light, opened up the back, twiddled with some wires and made it go green. The people in the other cars cheered, and I knew then that my dad could do fucking anything.

Okay, so he was working for the company who were doing the roadworks and put up the traffic light in the first place, but still, to a young boy that was pretty awesome. I bet Superman never made traffic lights change.

The thing is, at 15 you kind of rely on your Dad for all the little things that require a special tool. Dads have all the special tools. But I was still relying on my dad for stuff like that at 35, and starting to worry that I wasn’t “grown up male” material, let alone “dad material”.

And then, one day recently, I realised that I owned (partly due to consolidation with my wife’s belongings), not one but four wood saws, and a lot of other tools and gadgets for DIY. I didn’t have a collection of sticks for stirring paint, but I’ll know what one looks like when I see it.

Being able to do Dad Stuff sort of snuck up on me. As, I guess, it snuck up on my Dad too. Except he was 22 when I came along and I’m the wrong side of 35. So maybe it takes longer to pick up that stuff when you don’t have the pressing need.

It was my birthday a few months ago, and my dad bought me a complete set of spanners. It was, I realise now, a symbolic handing over the reins of Dadhood. Not quite a book on how to do bloody everything, but it will have to do.

Point 2: Worry endlessly about your wife, and the little tiny fragile thing growing inside her

Okay, so women have been having babies for, what, about a hundred years now? I’ve not checked Wikipedia but it’s got to be at least that. So I shouldn’t be worried about how it all works, should I?

But, what really stops him getting all tangled up in there? It’s worrying. Really.

And, each individual horrible disease, genetic flaw, whatever, they’re all pretty rare. But when you’re rolling the dice so many times…

I just really hope it all goes okay.

Of course, everyone’s supposed to say “whatever happens I’ll love him” and of course that’s true for me too. But it doesn’t stop me really really hoping that there’s nothing at all wrong with him.

We had a couple of hiccups, early on, with a worries about ectopic pregnancy, or no pregnancy at all. It all turned out okay, but I can’t really remember dread like that before, and I don’t want to experience it again. Worried because I could see Jane so worried, and I knew how devastating it would have been for her, and worried because I began to realise how much I wanted a child now.

The rest of the pregnancy has gone pretty much without a hitch, so now there’s just the other things to worry about, that he’ll have everything in the right order and not be… different. And feeling guilty about thinking like that. But I do.

Point 3: Worry about the future

Up until now, my life story has been scribbled, figuratively speaking, on scraps of paper. I never bothered to write what was going to happen next, when a new thing came into my life, I just found another scrap of paper to write it on. There was no next year, next decade, sometimes there was barely a tomorrow. The only post-dated scrap of paper had written on it “drop down dead”.

And then I got married and suddenly having Some Kind of Plan seems like a good idea. Maybe at least planning what you’re going to eat for the rest of the week. Nothing major.

Then a baby comes into the picture. And you get handed a great ream of blank note paper. With chapter headings dated up until 2050 and beyond. Things that are going to happen to this young person, and I want to be around to see them.

Before, the future was unknown, but I didn’t care because it only affected me. Now, the future is unknown and I care a lot because it affects someone else.

I’m still working on that one. I think it needs to be approached from two angles, both mitigating for what could happen, and also realising that there’s nothing that going to stop it happening, so it’s best not to worry about it too much.

I’ll let you know how I get on with that.

In summary

So, you may have got the gist that being a prospective father is worrying about a lot of things, all those above and more.

Worrying, but then dealing with each worry one by one; and doing it in a way that you look like you know what you’re doing.

So that maybe, somewhere down the line, some small person might think you’re Superman too.

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