Home | Forum | Search
The Imperfect Mom
Buy
I'll Get to It Tomorrow
The Imperfect Mom: Candid Confessions of Mothers Living in the Real World
by Therese J. Borchard

(Page 3 of 3)

Jessica Carlson

As if pregnancy weren't uncomfortable enough, Mother Nature and her twisted sense of humor blessed me in my third trimester with a case of bronchitis, complete with violent coughing spasms. This, combined with my ongoing battle with insomnia, deprived me of much needed rest. One late night, while plopped in my favorite chair, I had another hacking fit. As I reached up to cover my mouth, I felt a warm gush between my legs. A sickening feeling washed over me, as I had experienced water rupture with my first child and knew instinctively what had happened. I scrambled for the phone and called my ob-gyn. I was connected to his answering service (not surprising, as it was midnight), which blandly took my message and said they would page the doctor and have him call me. "Make it sooner than later," I muttered while hanging up the phone.

I rushed upstairs, shook my husband awake and explained that my water broke, and I needed to go to the hospital. He barely stirred-the seriousness of my words did not register in his groggy state. He was not in the high alert mode of most fathers-to-be, no cliched bag packed and waiting by the front door, to be ready at a moment's notice. Why was he not immediately springing out of bed? Why was he not already out in the garage, warming up the car? Because it's eight weeks early, that's why, I reminded myself. Rousing him again, he questioned my diagnosis.

"Don't pregnant women have bladder issues? Maybe that's what this is," he said.

"I think I would know if I had only wet my pants," I growled, my irritation increasing exponentially.

"Yeah, but I remember reading something about-"

He noticed my hands moving to wrap around his neck.

"I'll get ready to go."

Just then the phone rang. It was my doctor. As I was explaining what happened, he interrupted me and asked to remind him how far along I was.

"Thirty-two weeks."

"Are you sure?"

Oh, gee, now that you ask, ha, ha, silly me, I thought it was December, not February-of course I'm sure, are you kidding me?!

"Yes, I'm sure," I said with great restraint.

I was waiting for him to comfort me, perhaps tell me that this happened more often than you would think-we can fill your amniotic sac up with saline, pop a cork in there, and you can go back home! But instead he said the words that I already knew in my heart, but was hoping not to hear.

"Go to the emergency room right now. You're going to deliver this baby."

I've always been a procrastinator. I'm sure it is a deep-rooted subconscious rebelling against authority-I'll reluctantly conform and follow The Man's rigid timetables, but I'll be damned if he gets it early. Certainly a better explanation than simply being lazy. I only work my best when chasing a deadline. In college, papers and exams were always preceded by a late night fueled by coffee and cigarettes. At the office, I was the one standing by the printer, looking at my watch, waiting for the last pages of the report I had completed minutes before the big meeting. These words you are reading right now sneaked in just under the wire. Favor-seeking friends who append their requests with "whenever you get a chance," receive my warning that they need to pin down a date, don't worry about decorum, if they ever want the deed completed. I am the exception to the rule that slow and steady wins the race. I am Indiana Jones, just making it out of the cave before the big stone door crashes down, still managing to grab my hat.

As such, having my timetable shifted and heading to the delivery ward two months early threw me into a panic attack-not only because of the concern for the health of my child, but because I was not emotionally or physically ready to have this baby. Procrastination and premature birth are not two things that go together. I had not even thought about things that some women take care of before the zygote stage. Child care? Nothing lined up. My mother's promise to come visit when the baby was born? I hadn't even made the plane reservation yet. I had purchased a total of zero items in preparation of the baby. The unassembled crib was buried deep within our storage unit. Dirty laundry was piled in the basement. A myriad of things at work needed to be wrapped up before even thinking about maternity leave. I had not even made arrangements for someone to stay with my older son while I was giving birth. It looked as if my bad habit was finally biting me in the behind.

« Previous  

Copyright © 2006 by Therese J. Borchard.

About the Author

Therese Borchard is the editor of I Like Being Catholic. Therese Borchard has written seventeen books, including Winging It: Meditations of a Young Adult and the acclaimed children's books series The Emerald Bible Collection. She lives in Annapolis, Maryland.

More by Therese J. Borchard
  In this book
» We Wuz Robbed
» Unfit For Motherhood
» I'll Get to It Tomorrow
Related Topics
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Stepchildren
Children and Divorce
Articles & Books
Watching Star Trek with Dylan, Part 2 - Between Mothers and Sons
So, what can I do to nurture my son, this practically alien being? One thing I can do is let him watch Star Trek, or what he recognizes in it, I am now sure, is the plain truth about his destiny.
The Stanford Survey - Getting It Right
A common assumption among psychologists is that we all research our own neuroses, and I clearly am no exception. Since the 1980s at Stanford, the primary focus of both my clinical and research work has been the stresses inherent in the lives of working
At A Glance: Demographics - Getting It Right
Prior to the late 1970s, each graduating class at highly selective business and professional schools like Stanford included less than a handful of women. One of the women who graduated in the early 1970s recalled her admissions interview

© 2008 eNotAlone.com